International audienceHumans are highly sensitive to symmetry. During scene exploration, the area of the retina with dense light receptor coverage acquires most information from relevant locations determined by gaze fixation. We characterized patterns of fixational eye movements made by observers staring at synthetic scenes either freely (i.e., free exploration) or during a symmetry orientation discrimination task (i.e., active exploration). Stimuli could be mirror-symmetric or not. Both free and active exploration gener- ated more saccades parallel to the axis of symmetry than along other orientations. Most saccades were small ( 2°), leaving the fovea within a 4° radius of fixation. Analysis of saccade dynamics showed that the observed par...
Humans are very sensitive to symmetry in visual patterns. Symmetry is detected and recognized very r...
The visual system is sensitive to symmetries in the frontoparallel plane, and bilateral symmetry abo...
symmetry judgment seems instantaneous, there is considerable evidence that it is a two-stage process...
International audienceHumans are highly sensitive to symmetry. During scene exploration, the area of...
Visual symmetry perception and symmetry preference have been studied extensively. However, less is k...
Humans are very sensitive to symmetry in visual patterns. Symmetry is detected and recognized very r...
Integrating shape contours in the visual periphery is vital to our ability to locate objects and thu...
Abstract symmetric patterns are generally preferred to less regular patterns. Here, we studied 2D pa...
AbstractBilateral or mirror symmetry is a ubiquitous feature of biological forms that the visual sys...
Integrating shape contours in the visual periphery is vital to our ability to locate objects and thu...
The human visual system has specialised mechanisms for encoding mirror-symmetry and for detecting sy...
No author version is available for upload (MF 8 Dec 2015)Neurologically normal individuals devote m...
Most bottom-up models that predict human eye fixations are based on contrast features. The saliency ...
The human visual system is remarkably adept at finding objects of interest in cluttered visual envir...
Most bottom-up models that predict human eye fixations are based on contrast features. The saliency ...
Humans are very sensitive to symmetry in visual patterns. Symmetry is detected and recognized very r...
The visual system is sensitive to symmetries in the frontoparallel plane, and bilateral symmetry abo...
symmetry judgment seems instantaneous, there is considerable evidence that it is a two-stage process...
International audienceHumans are highly sensitive to symmetry. During scene exploration, the area of...
Visual symmetry perception and symmetry preference have been studied extensively. However, less is k...
Humans are very sensitive to symmetry in visual patterns. Symmetry is detected and recognized very r...
Integrating shape contours in the visual periphery is vital to our ability to locate objects and thu...
Abstract symmetric patterns are generally preferred to less regular patterns. Here, we studied 2D pa...
AbstractBilateral or mirror symmetry is a ubiquitous feature of biological forms that the visual sys...
Integrating shape contours in the visual periphery is vital to our ability to locate objects and thu...
The human visual system has specialised mechanisms for encoding mirror-symmetry and for detecting sy...
No author version is available for upload (MF 8 Dec 2015)Neurologically normal individuals devote m...
Most bottom-up models that predict human eye fixations are based on contrast features. The saliency ...
The human visual system is remarkably adept at finding objects of interest in cluttered visual envir...
Most bottom-up models that predict human eye fixations are based on contrast features. The saliency ...
Humans are very sensitive to symmetry in visual patterns. Symmetry is detected and recognized very r...
The visual system is sensitive to symmetries in the frontoparallel plane, and bilateral symmetry abo...
symmetry judgment seems instantaneous, there is considerable evidence that it is a two-stage process...