| Literature DB >> 33810422 |
Celia Andreu-Sánchez1, Miguel Ángel Martín-Pascual1,2, Agnès Gruart3, José María Delgado-García3.
Abstract
Eye blinks provoke a loss of visual information. However, we are not constantly making conscious decisions about the appropriate moment to blink. The presence or absence of eye blinks also denotes levels of attention. We presented three movies with the exact same narrative but different styles of editing and recorded participants' eye blinks. We found that moments of increased or decreased eye blinks by viewers coincided with the same content in the different movie styles. The moments of increased eye blinks corresponded to those when the actor leaves the scene and when the movie repeats the same action for a while. The moments of decreased eye blinks corresponded to actions where visual information was crucial to proper understanding of the scene presented. According to these results, viewers' attention is more related to narrative content than to the style of editing when watching movies.Entities:
Keywords: attention; cognitive neuroscience; media content; neurocinematics; visual perception
Year: 2021 PMID: 33810422 PMCID: PMC8065395 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11040422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Timeline of the video, showing histograms of eye blinks from all participants (N = 40) while watching the movie with each style. Red circles indicate blinks during the one-shot movie; green triangles those during the continuous movie, edited with a classical style; and blue squares those during the movie with discontinuous and chaotic style. The distribution is into 40 bins of 4.95 s each. The boxes indicate the moments and actions when viewers’ eye blinks coincide among the different styles of editing.
Figure 2Moments with increased and decreased eye blinks while watching the same narrative with three different styles of editing. (A) The three moments when increased eye blinks were observed regardless of the style of editing (from top to bottom): when the actor disappears from the scene near the beginning of the movie, when the actor finishes eating the apple, and when the actor disappears from the scene at the end of the movie. (B) The three moments when decreased eye blinks were observed regardless of the style of editing (from top to bottom): when the actor juggles three balls, when the actor puts his hand in his pocket, and when the actor makes faces (sad, happy, and disgusted). The person appearing in Figure 2 is co-author Miguel Ángel Martín-Pascual. Dr. Martín-Pascual consents to the appearance of his image in this publication.