Literature DB >> 19761319

Quantifying center bias of observers in free viewing of dynamic natural scenes.

Po-He Tseng1, Ran Carmi, Ian G M Cameron, Douglas P Munoz, Laurent Itti.   

Abstract

Human eye-tracking studies have shown that gaze fixations are biased toward the center of natural scene stimuli ("center bias"). This bias contaminates the evaluation of computational models of attention and oculomotor behavior. Here we recorded eye movements from 17 participants watching 40 MTV-style video clips (with abrupt scene changes every 2-4 s), to quantify the relative contributions of five causes of center bias: photographer bias, motor bias, viewing strategy, orbital reserve, and screen center. Photographer bias was evaluated by five naive human raters and correlated with eye movements. The frequently changing scenes in MTV-style videos allowed us to assess how motor bias and viewing strategy affected center bias across time. In an additional experiment with 5 participants, videos were displayed at different locations within a large screen to investigate the influences of orbital reserve and screen center. Our results demonstrate quantitatively for the first time that center bias is correlated strongly with photographer bias and is influenced by viewing strategy at scene onset, while orbital reserve, screen center, and motor bias contribute minimally. We discuss methods to account for these influences to better assess computational models of visual attention and gaze using natural scene stimuli.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19761319     DOI: 10.1167/9.7.4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  45 in total

1.  Age differences in online processing of video: an eye movement study.

Authors:  Heather L Kirkorian; Daniel R Anderson; Rachel Keen
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2012-01-30

2.  Saliency and saccade encoding in the frontal eye field during natural scene search.

Authors:  Hugo L Fernandes; Ian H Stevenson; Adam N Phillips; Mark A Segraves; Konrad P Kording
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2013-07-17       Impact factor: 5.357

Review 3.  Eye movements: the past 25 years.

Authors:  Eileen Kowler
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2011-01-13       Impact factor: 1.886

4.  Modeling peripheral visual acuity enables discovery of gaze strategies at multiple time scales during natural scene search.

Authors:  Pavan Ramkumar; Hugo Fernandes; Konrad Kording; Mark Segraves
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2015-03-26       Impact factor: 2.240

5.  Eye movements while viewing narrated, captioned, and silent videos.

Authors:  Nicholas M Ross; Eileen Kowler
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2013-03-01       Impact factor: 2.240

6.  Temporal eye movement strategies during naturalistic viewing.

Authors:  Helena X Wang; Jeremy Freeman; Elisha P Merriam; Uri Hasson; David J Heeger
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2012-01-19       Impact factor: 2.240

7.  Ensemble statistics accessed through proxies: Range heuristic and dependence on low-level properties in variability discrimination.

Authors:  Jonas Sin-Heng Lau; Timothy F Brady
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2018-09-04       Impact factor: 2.240

8.  Feature-based attention and spatial selection in frontal eye fields during natural scene search.

Authors:  Pavan Ramkumar; Patrick N Lawlor; Joshua I Glaser; Daniel K Wood; Adam N Phillips; Mark A Segraves; Konrad P Kording
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2016-06-01       Impact factor: 2.714

9.  From Prior Information to Saccade Selection: Evolution of Frontal Eye Field Activity during Natural Scene Search.

Authors:  Joshua I Glaser; Daniel K Wood; Patrick N Lawlor; Mark A Segraves; Konrad P Kording
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2020-03-14       Impact factor: 5.357

10.  Everyone knows what is interesting: salient locations which should be fixated.

Authors:  Christopher Michael Masciocchi; Stefan Mihalas; Derrick Parkhurst; Ernst Niebur
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2009-10-27       Impact factor: 2.240

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