Eye-Movement Control in Direction-Coded Visual Search
2001; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 30; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1068/p3056
ISSN1468-4233
AutoresHarold H. Greene, Keith Rayner,
Tópico(s)Visual perception and processing mechanisms
ResumoSubjects searched for a target among distractors which were arranged randomly or such that each distractor provided information about the relative position of a target. Trials were presented either in a blocked design (so that the subjects knew a priori the contextual information in the display) or in a mixed design. When the distractors provided information about target position, there were (i) shorter manual RTs, (ii) fewer fixations made in search of the target, (iii) longer mean fixation durations, (iv) shorter initial fixation durations, (v) shorter mean gaze shifts, (vi) a smaller area of fixation dispersion, and (vii) a greater percentage of optimally directed saccades. Except for gaze shifts, the results were uninfluenced by whether or not there was a blocked or a mixed presentation. The results of the study suggest that despite noise in the search mechanism, fixation durations were adjusted to process directly the currently fixated element(s).
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