Authors
Monica S Castelhano, Michael L Mack, John M Henderson
Publication date
2009/3/13
Journal
Journal of Vision
Volume
9
Issue
3
Publisher
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
Description
Expanding on the seminal work of G. Buswell (1935) and IA Yarbus (1967), we investigated how task instruction influences specific parameters of eye movement control. In the present study, 20 participants viewed color photographs of natural scenes under two instruction sets: visual search and memorization. Results showed that task influenced a number of eye movement measures including the number of fixations and gaze duration on specific objects. Additional analyses revealed that the areas fixated were qualitatively different between the two tasks. However, other measures such as average saccade amplitude and individual fixation durations remained constant across the viewing of the scene and across tasks. The present study demonstrates that viewing task biases the selection of scene regions and aggregate measures of fixation time on those regions but does not influence other measures, such as the duration of individual fixations.
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Scholar articles