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Title

Salient object changes influence overt attentional prioritization and object-based targeting in natural scenes.

Authors

Anderson, Nicola C.; Donk, Mieke

Abstract

A change to an object in natural scenes attracts attention when it occurs during a fixation. However, when a change occurs during a saccade, and is masked by saccadic suppression, it typically does not capture the gaze in a bottom-up manner. In the present work, we investigated how the type and direction of salient changes to objects affect the prioritization and targeting of objects in natural scenes. We asked observers to look around a scene in preparation for a later memory test. After a period of time, an object in the scene was increased or decreased in salience either during a fixation (with a transient signal) or during a saccade (without transient signal), or it was not changed at all. Changes that were made during a fixation attracted the eyes both when the change involved an increase and a decrease in salience. However, changes that were made during a saccade only captured the eyes when the change was an increase in salience, relative to the baseline no-change condition. These results suggest that the prioritization of object changes can be influenced by the underlying salience of the changed object. In addition, object changes that occurred with a transient signal (which is itself a salient signal) resulted in more central object targeting. Taken together, our results suggest that salient signals in a natural scene are an important component in both object prioritization and targeting in natural scene viewing, insofar as they align with object locations.

Subjects

LANDSCAPES; ATTENTION; MEMORY testing; SACCADIC eye movements; COGNITIVE psychology

Publication

PLoS ONE, 2017, Vol 12, Issue 2, p1

ISSN

1932-6203

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0172132

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