In a change blindness paradigm, participants are presented with two images (alternating or side-by-side) and are asked to detect a change created with digital image manipulation. A recent study has suggested that changes in cast shadows are more difficult to detect than changes in objects (Ehinger, Allen, & Wolfe, 2016). Research has also suggested that when judging faces, observers show reduced attention to cast shadows (Hermens & Zdravković, 2015). A plausible reason for change blindness for shadows is therefore that observers fail to attend the relevant areas in an image. We here test this hypothesis by measuring eye movements while observers freely view the images from Ehinger et al. (2016). To compare change blindness in the same set-u...
Change blindness on web pages was studied for 20 participants. The purpose was to find how change bl...
Change blindness-our inability to detect changes in a stimulus-occurs even when the change takes pla...
Change blindness and inattentional blindness share commonalities in their phenomenology as failures ...
In a change blindness paradigm, participants are presented with two images (alternating or side-by-s...
Studies have found that observers pay less attention to cast shadows in images than to better illumi...
Change blindness is a phenomenon in which major changes to a visual scene go unnoticed. There are ma...
Change blindness is defined as a situation that change depending on replacement of information in fi...
Although change detection constitutes an important and pervasive process in our everyday lives, phen...
Change blindness is defined as a situation that change depending on replacement of information in fi...
When two scenes are alternately displayed, separated by a mask, even large, repeated changes between...
Observers are often unaware of changes in their visual environment until attention is drawn to the l...
Across saccades, blinks, blank screens, movie cuts, and other interruptions, ob-servers fail to dete...
Evidence from many different paradigms (e.g. change blindness, inattentional blindness, transsaccadi...
AbstractLarge changes in a scene often become difficult to notice if made during an eye movement, im...
Humans are remarkably insensitive to large changes in a visual display if the change occurs simultan...
Change blindness on web pages was studied for 20 participants. The purpose was to find how change bl...
Change blindness-our inability to detect changes in a stimulus-occurs even when the change takes pla...
Change blindness and inattentional blindness share commonalities in their phenomenology as failures ...
In a change blindness paradigm, participants are presented with two images (alternating or side-by-s...
Studies have found that observers pay less attention to cast shadows in images than to better illumi...
Change blindness is a phenomenon in which major changes to a visual scene go unnoticed. There are ma...
Change blindness is defined as a situation that change depending on replacement of information in fi...
Although change detection constitutes an important and pervasive process in our everyday lives, phen...
Change blindness is defined as a situation that change depending on replacement of information in fi...
When two scenes are alternately displayed, separated by a mask, even large, repeated changes between...
Observers are often unaware of changes in their visual environment until attention is drawn to the l...
Across saccades, blinks, blank screens, movie cuts, and other interruptions, ob-servers fail to dete...
Evidence from many different paradigms (e.g. change blindness, inattentional blindness, transsaccadi...
AbstractLarge changes in a scene often become difficult to notice if made during an eye movement, im...
Humans are remarkably insensitive to large changes in a visual display if the change occurs simultan...
Change blindness on web pages was studied for 20 participants. The purpose was to find how change bl...
Change blindness-our inability to detect changes in a stimulus-occurs even when the change takes pla...
Change blindness and inattentional blindness share commonalities in their phenomenology as failures ...