International audienceA crucial component of event recognition is understanding event roles, i.e. who acted on whom: boy hitting girl is different from girl hitting boy. We often categorize Agents (i.e. the actor) and Patients (i.e. the one acted upon) from visual input, but do we rapidly and spontaneously encode such roles even when our attention is otherwise occupied? In three experiments, participants observed a continuous sequence of two-person scenes and had to search for a target actor in each (the male/female or red/blue-shirted actor) by indicating with a button press whether the target appeared on the left or the right. Critically, although role was orthogonal to gender and shirt color, and was never explicitly mentioned, participa...
How does the human brain represent simple compositions of constituents: actors, verbs, objects, dire...
Memory for naturalistic events over short delays is important for visual scene processing, reading c...
We deal with the problem of recognizing social roles played by people in an event. Social roles are ...
International audienceA crucial component of event recognition is understanding event roles, i.e. wh...
Unlike rapid scene and object recognition from brief displays, little is known about recognition of ...
Our visual experience is surprisingly rich: We do not only see low-level properties such as colors o...
Thematic roles characterise the functions of participants in events, but there is no agreement on ho...
Research across domains has suggested that agents, the doers of actions, have a processing advantage...
Contains fulltext : 198786.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)The language th...
Research in naturalistic event perception highlights the significance of visuospatial attributes per...
Studies monitoring eye-movements in scenes containing entities have provided robust evidence for inc...
Studies that monitor attention in depicted event scenes during utterance comprehension show that peo...
We present three experiments to identify the specific information sources that skilled participants ...
The study of event perception emphasizes the importance of visuospatial attributes in everyday human...
The study of event perception emphasizes the importance of visuospatial attributes in everyday human...
How does the human brain represent simple compositions of constituents: actors, verbs, objects, dire...
Memory for naturalistic events over short delays is important for visual scene processing, reading c...
We deal with the problem of recognizing social roles played by people in an event. Social roles are ...
International audienceA crucial component of event recognition is understanding event roles, i.e. wh...
Unlike rapid scene and object recognition from brief displays, little is known about recognition of ...
Our visual experience is surprisingly rich: We do not only see low-level properties such as colors o...
Thematic roles characterise the functions of participants in events, but there is no agreement on ho...
Research across domains has suggested that agents, the doers of actions, have a processing advantage...
Contains fulltext : 198786.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)The language th...
Research in naturalistic event perception highlights the significance of visuospatial attributes per...
Studies monitoring eye-movements in scenes containing entities have provided robust evidence for inc...
Studies that monitor attention in depicted event scenes during utterance comprehension show that peo...
We present three experiments to identify the specific information sources that skilled participants ...
The study of event perception emphasizes the importance of visuospatial attributes in everyday human...
The study of event perception emphasizes the importance of visuospatial attributes in everyday human...
How does the human brain represent simple compositions of constituents: actors, verbs, objects, dire...
Memory for naturalistic events over short delays is important for visual scene processing, reading c...
We deal with the problem of recognizing social roles played by people in an event. Social roles are ...