Contextual guidance of eye movements and attention in real-world scenes: the role of global features in object search.
- A. Torralba, A. Oliva, M. Castelhano, J. Henderson
- PsychologyPsychology Review
- 1 October 2006
An original approach of attentional guidance by global scene context is presented that combines bottom-up saliency, scene context, and top-down mechanisms at an early stage of visual processing and predicts the image regions likely to be fixated by human observers performing natural search tasks in real-world scenes.
Human gaze control during real-world scene perception
- J. Henderson
- PsychologyTrends in Cognitive Sciences
- 1 November 2003
Accurate visual memory for previously attended objects in natural scenes
- A. Hollingworth, J. Henderson
- Psychology
- 1 February 2002
The nature of the information retained from previously fixated (and hence attended) objects in natural scenes was investigated. In a saccade-contingent change paradigm, participants successfully…
The effects of semantic consistency on eye movements during complex scene viewing
- J. Henderson, P. A. Weeks, A. Hollingworth
- Psychology
- 1 February 1999
High-level scene perception.
- J. Henderson, A. Hollingworth
- PsychologyAnnual Review of Psychology
- 1999
Three areas of high-level scene perception research are reviewed, focusing on the role of eye movements in scene perception and the influence of ongoing cognitive processing on the position and duration of fixations in a scene.
Clustering of Gaze During Dynamic Scene Viewing is Predicted by Motion
- P. Mital, T. Smith, Robin L. Hill, J. Henderson
- PsychologyCognitive Computation
- 1 March 2011
The results show that mid-level visual features including corners and orientations can distinguish between actual gaze locations and a randomly sampled baseline, however, temporal features such as flicker, motion, and their respective contrasts were the most predictive of gaze location.
Executive functions and ADHD in adults: evidence for selective effects on ADHD symptom domains.
- J. Nigg, Gillian M. Stavro, M. Ettenhofer, D. Hambrick, T. Miller, J. Henderson
- PsychologyJournal of Abnormal Psychology
- 1 November 2005
Dual-process models of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) suggest that both executive functioning and regulatory functions (e.g., processing speed) are involved and that executive…
VISUAL SALIENCY DOES NOT ACCOUNT FOR EYE MOVEMENTS DURING VISUAL SEARCH IN REAL-WORLD SCENES
- J. Henderson, J. Brockmole, M. Castelhano, Michael L. Mack
- Psychology, Biology
- 2007
Top-down control of visual attention in object detection
- A. Oliva, A. Torralba, M. Castelhano, J. Henderson
- Psychology, Computer ScienceProceedings International Conference on Image…
- 24 November 2003
The results validate the proposition that top-down information from visual context modulates the saliency of image regions during the task of object detection.
Eye movements are functional during face learning
- J. Henderson, Carrick C. Williams, Richard J. Falk
- PsychologyMemory & Cognition
- 2005
Eye movements were recorded during the free viewing learning condition, as well as during recognition, suggesting that the eye movements generated during recognition are not simply a recapitulation of those produced during learning.
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