textabstractEye and head movements were recorded as unrestrained subjects tapped or only looked at nearby targets. Scanning patterns were the same in both tasks: subjects looked at each target before tapping it; visual search had similar speeds and gaze-shift accuracies. Looking however, took longer and, unlike tapping, benefitted little from practice. Looking speeded up more than tapping when memory load was reduced: memory was more efficient during tapping. Conclusion: eye movements made when only looking are different from those made when tapping. Visual search functions as a separate process, incorporated into both tasks: it can be used to improve performance when memory load is heavy
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Two experiments evaluated whether visual search can be made more efficient by having participants gi...
We assessed fixation planning in visual search in two experiments by tracking participants’ eye move...
AbstractEye and head movements were recorded as unrestrained subjects tapped or only looked at nearb...
Eye and head movements were recorded as unrestrained subjects tapped or only looked at nearby target...
Motivated by the fact that previous visual memory paradigms have imposed encoding and retrieval cons...
AbstractParticipants’ eye-movements were monitored while they searched for a target among a varying ...
Visual search is an important component of many ac-tivities, from driving in an unfamiliar city to e...
Three experiments were conducted to investigate the carry-over of a location-based attentional set f...
Paying attention to an object facilitates its storage in working memory. The authors investigate whe...
Visual search is thought to be guided by an active visual working memory (VWM) representation of the...
Task performance is influenced by the allocation of visual attention, and models of scanning behavio...
When searching for a target with eye movements, saccades are planned and initiated while the visual ...
When visual stimuli remain present during search, people spend more time fixating objects that are s...
Visual search-looking for a target object in the presence of a number of distractor items-is an ever...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Two experiments evaluated whether visual search can be made more efficient by having participants gi...
We assessed fixation planning in visual search in two experiments by tracking participants’ eye move...
AbstractEye and head movements were recorded as unrestrained subjects tapped or only looked at nearb...
Eye and head movements were recorded as unrestrained subjects tapped or only looked at nearby target...
Motivated by the fact that previous visual memory paradigms have imposed encoding and retrieval cons...
AbstractParticipants’ eye-movements were monitored while they searched for a target among a varying ...
Visual search is an important component of many ac-tivities, from driving in an unfamiliar city to e...
Three experiments were conducted to investigate the carry-over of a location-based attentional set f...
Paying attention to an object facilitates its storage in working memory. The authors investigate whe...
Visual search is thought to be guided by an active visual working memory (VWM) representation of the...
Task performance is influenced by the allocation of visual attention, and models of scanning behavio...
When searching for a target with eye movements, saccades are planned and initiated while the visual ...
When visual stimuli remain present during search, people spend more time fixating objects that are s...
Visual search-looking for a target object in the presence of a number of distractor items-is an ever...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Two experiments evaluated whether visual search can be made more efficient by having participants gi...
We assessed fixation planning in visual search in two experiments by tracking participants’ eye move...