Modeling the effects of perisaccadic attention on gaze statistics during scene viewing
Autor: | Lars O. M. Rothkegel, Hans A. Trukenbrod, Lisa Schwetlick, Ralf Engbert |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Department Psychologie
0301 basic medicine Computer science Research areas ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION Medicine (miscellaneous) Fixation Ocular Bayesian inference Models Biological Article General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology bepress|Life Sciences|Neuroscience and Neurobiology 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine ddc:150 Human behaviour Statistics Saccades Computational models Humans Computer Simulation Experimental work bepress|Life Sciences|Neuroscience and Neurobiology|Cognitive Neuroscience Models Statistical Dynamic Scan PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Cognitive Psychology|Attention Gaze bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive Psychology PsyArXiv|Neuroscience|Cognitive Neuroscience PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences 030104 developmental biology PsyArXiv|Neuroscience Covert Saccade Fixation (visual) bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Cognitive Psychology Visual system General Agricultural and Biological Sciences 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Communications Biology |
ISSN: | 2399-3642 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s42003-020-01429-8 |
Popis: | How we perceive a visual scene depends critically on the selection of gaze positions. For this selection process, visual attention is known to play a key role in two ways. First, image-features attract visual attention, a fact that is captured well by time-independent fixation models. Second, millisecond-level attentional dynamics around the time of saccade drives our gaze from one position to the next. These two related research areas on attention are typically perceived as separate, both theoretically and experimentally. Here we link the two research areas by demonstrating that perisaccadic attentional dynamics improve predictions on scan path statistics. In a mathematical model, we integrated perisaccadic covert attention with dynamic scan path generation. Our model reproduces saccade amplitude distributions, angular statistics, intersaccadic turning angles, and their impact on fixation durations as well as inter-individual differences using Bayesian inference. Therefore, our result lend support to the relevance of perisaccadic attention to gaze statistics. Lisa Schwetlick et al. present a computational model linking visual scan path generation in scene viewing to physiological and experimental work on perisaccadic covert attention, the act of attending to an object visually without obviously moving the eyes toward it. They find that integrating covert attention into predictive models of visual scan paths greatly improves the model’s agreement with experimental data. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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