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Semantic override of low-level features in image viewing - both initially and overall

Author

Summary, in English

Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by

stimulus driven factors as well as viewer dependent higher level factors such as task

and memory. It is currently debated to what proportions these factors contribute

to gaze guidance, and also how they vary over time after image onset. Overall, the

unanimity regarding these issues is surprisingly low and there are results supporting

both types of factors as being dominant in eye-movement control under certain

conditions. We investigate in this paper how low, and high level factors influence eye

guidance by manipulating contrast statistics on images from three different semantic

categories and measure how this affects fixation selection. Our results show that the

degree to which contrast manipulations affect fixation selection heavily depends on

an image’s semantic content, and how this content is distributed over the image.

Over the three image categories, we found no systematic differences between contrast

and edge density at fixated location compared to control locations, neither during the

initial fixation nor over the whole time course of viewing. These results suggest that

cognitive factors easily can override low-level factors in fixation selection, even when

the viewing task is neutral.

Publishing year

2008

Language

English

Pages

1-11

Publication/Series

Journal of Eye Movement Research

Volume

2

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

European Group for Eye Movement Research

Topic

  • Philosophy
  • Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

Keywords

  • semantic information dispersion
  • bottom-up
  • Image viewing
  • top-down
  • contrast manipulation

Status

Published

Research group

  • Crypto and Security

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1995-8692