Everyone knows what is interesting: Salient locations which should be fixated
Author(s) -
C. Masciocchi,
Ştefan Mihalaş,
Derrick Parkhurst,
Ernst Niebur
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/9.11.25
Subject(s) - saccadic masking , salient , eye movement , observer (physics) , cognitive psychology , natural (archaeology) , population , process (computing) , computer science , artificial intelligence , cognition , scene statistics , prioritization , psychology , sensory system , selection (genetic algorithm) , communication , computer vision , perception , geography , neuroscience , physics , demography , archaeology , quantum mechanics , management science , sociology , economics , operating system
Most natural scenes are too complex to be perceived instantaneously in their entirety. Observers therefore have to select parts of them and process these parts sequentially. We study how this selection and prioritization process is performed by humans at two different levels. One is the overt attention mechanism of saccadic eye movements in a free-viewing paradigm. The second is a conscious decision process in which we asked observers which points in a scene they considered the most interesting. We find in a very large participant population (more than one thousand) that observers largely agree on which points they consider interesting. Their selections are also correlated with the eye movement pattern of different subjects. Both are correlated with predictions of a purely bottom-up saliency map model. Thus, bottom-up saliency influences cognitive processes as far removed from the sensory periphery as in the conscious choice of what an observer considers interesting.
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