The present study investigates top-down governed visual selection in natural traffic scenes. The subjects had to search for a target object (for example, a traffic sign, or other road users) which was embedded in a natural traffic scene. Given a particular prototypical scene, the target was located either at a likely (expected) or unlikely (unexpected) position. The probability that a target object appeared at a likely location was varied between groups of subjects. The results showed the existence of scene dependent scanning strategies: search in the unexpected condition was significantly more error prone than search in the expected condition. This suggests that subjects strategically prepare for the upcoming stimulus and only search those...
AbstractHow does scene context guide search behavior to likely target locations? We had observers se...
Novice drivers tend to direct their gaze to the road ahead and not scan the environment properly. T...
Novice drivers tend to direct their gaze to the road ahead and not scan the environment properly. Th...
Research suggests that the allocation of attention whilst driving is influenced by the top-down atte...
The structural nature of the world often provides a clear guide to where sought objects are likely t...
This report is a note about the 1989-1991 research period of the "Visual selection" project that was...
-Driving involves visual exploration of the road environment and one important driving subtask is to...
Abstract. Previous re earch on visual search in driving suffers from a numbe of problems: small sa...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Investigations of search within realistic scenes have identified both bottom-up and top-down influen...
Three experiments explored the transference of visual scanning behaviour between two unrelated tasks...
AbstractEvidence from eye-tracking experiments has provided mixed support for saliency map models of...
The natural environment that individuals are exposed to on a daily basis is filled with many distrac...
People routinely search through complex visual environments, as when looking up a number in the phon...
In daily life, attention is often directed to high-level object attributes, such as when we look out...
AbstractHow does scene context guide search behavior to likely target locations? We had observers se...
Novice drivers tend to direct their gaze to the road ahead and not scan the environment properly. T...
Novice drivers tend to direct their gaze to the road ahead and not scan the environment properly. Th...
Research suggests that the allocation of attention whilst driving is influenced by the top-down atte...
The structural nature of the world often provides a clear guide to where sought objects are likely t...
This report is a note about the 1989-1991 research period of the "Visual selection" project that was...
-Driving involves visual exploration of the road environment and one important driving subtask is to...
Abstract. Previous re earch on visual search in driving suffers from a numbe of problems: small sa...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Investigations of search within realistic scenes have identified both bottom-up and top-down influen...
Three experiments explored the transference of visual scanning behaviour between two unrelated tasks...
AbstractEvidence from eye-tracking experiments has provided mixed support for saliency map models of...
The natural environment that individuals are exposed to on a daily basis is filled with many distrac...
People routinely search through complex visual environments, as when looking up a number in the phon...
In daily life, attention is often directed to high-level object attributes, such as when we look out...
AbstractHow does scene context guide search behavior to likely target locations? We had observers se...
Novice drivers tend to direct their gaze to the road ahead and not scan the environment properly. T...
Novice drivers tend to direct their gaze to the road ahead and not scan the environment properly. Th...