Authors
Antje Nuthmann, Tim J Smith, Ralf Engbert, John M Henderson
Publication date
2010/4
Journal
Psychological review
Volume
117
Issue
2
Pages
382
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Eye-movement control during scene viewing can be represented as a series of individual decisions about where and when to move the eyes. While substantial behavioral and computational research has been devoted to investigating the placement of fixations in scenes, relatively little is known about the mechanisms that control fixation durations. Here, we propose a computational model (CRISP) that accounts for saccade timing and programming and thus for variations in fixation durations in scene viewing. First, timing signals are modeled as continuous-time random walks. Second, difficulties at the level of visual and cognitive processing can inhibit and thus modulate saccade timing. Inhibition generates moment-by-moment changes in the random walk’s transition rate and processing-related saccade cancellation. Third, saccade programming is completed in 2 stages: an initial, labile stage that is subject to …
Total citations
2010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320245131723211818512417251413169
Scholar articles
A Nuthmann, TJ Smith, R Engbert, JM Henderson - Psychological review, 2010