Literature DB >> 12075694

Investigating spatial vision and dynamic attentional selection using a gaze-contingent multiresolutional display.

Lester C Loschky1, George W McConkie.   

Abstract

This study examined spatial vision and attentional selection using a gaze-contingent multiresolutional display, with a dynamic, gaze-centered, high-resolution window and lower resolution periphery. Visual search times and eye movements from 15 participants in a 3 x 3 design (Window Radius x Peripheral Resolution) suggest that contrast sensitivity as a function of retinal eccentricity affects attentional selection and visual processing. Smaller windows led to longer search times and shorter saccades; lower peripheral resolution also shortened saccades (all ps < .05) as a result of avoiding fixating degraded areas. Fixation durations, although longer for smaller windows (p < .05), were unaffected by whether the next saccade went within or outside the window. These results are explained through (a) competition among potential saccade targets where above-threshold filtering reduces an object's relative salience and (b) generally disrupted visual processing.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12075694

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Appl        ISSN: 1076-898X


  20 in total

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8.  Direct measurement of the system latency of gaze-contingent displays.

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