A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scenes. Two scenes were presented side by side: one contained a single person (person-present) and one did not (person-absent). Eye movements were recorded, the principal measures being the time spent looking at each region of the scenes, and the latency and location of the first fixation within each trial. We studied gaze patterns during free viewing, and also in a task requiring gender discrimination of the human figure depicted. Results indicated a strong bias towards looking to the person-present scene. This bias was present on the first fixation after image presentation, confirming previous findings of ultra-rapid processing of complex infor...
We have a strong intuition that people's eyes are unique, socially informative stimuli. As such, it ...
The study of social attention has in large part been constrained to studying how individuals look to...
What do we see when we glance at a natural scene and how does it change as the glance becomes longer...
A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scen...
A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scen...
Previous research demonstrated that humans rapidly and reflexively prioritize social features (espec...
In two experiments we examined whether the allocation of attention in natural scene viewing is influ...
Person detection is an important prerequisite of social interaction, but is not well understood. Fol...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
Knowing where people look on a face provides an objective insight into the information entering the ...
Großekathöfer J, Suchotzki K, Gamer M. Gaze cueing in naturalistic scenes under top-down modulation ...
The central tenet of this paper is that by determining where people are looking, other tasks involve...
Knowing where people look on a face provides an objective insight into the information entering the ...
Women and men are different. As humans are highly visual animals, these differences should be reflec...
Humans perform frequent saccadic eye movements to collect visual information from the environment. T...
We have a strong intuition that people's eyes are unique, socially informative stimuli. As such, it ...
The study of social attention has in large part been constrained to studying how individuals look to...
What do we see when we glance at a natural scene and how does it change as the glance becomes longer...
A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scen...
A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scen...
Previous research demonstrated that humans rapidly and reflexively prioritize social features (espec...
In two experiments we examined whether the allocation of attention in natural scene viewing is influ...
Person detection is an important prerequisite of social interaction, but is not well understood. Fol...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
Knowing where people look on a face provides an objective insight into the information entering the ...
Großekathöfer J, Suchotzki K, Gamer M. Gaze cueing in naturalistic scenes under top-down modulation ...
The central tenet of this paper is that by determining where people are looking, other tasks involve...
Knowing where people look on a face provides an objective insight into the information entering the ...
Women and men are different. As humans are highly visual animals, these differences should be reflec...
Humans perform frequent saccadic eye movements to collect visual information from the environment. T...
We have a strong intuition that people's eyes are unique, socially informative stimuli. As such, it ...
The study of social attention has in large part been constrained to studying how individuals look to...
What do we see when we glance at a natural scene and how does it change as the glance becomes longer...