Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing

During text reading, the durations of eye fixations decrease with greater frequency and predictability of the currently fixated word (Rayner, 1998; 2009). However, it has not been tested whether those results also apply to scene viewing. We computed object frequency and predictability from both ling...

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Main Authors: Hsueh-Cheng Wang, Alex D. Hwang, Marc Pomplun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2010-07-01
Series:Journal of Eye Movement Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2297
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spelling doaj-e6ab1b88936b4de987b3a94db55f312c2021-05-28T13:34:41ZengBern Open PublishingJournal of Eye Movement Research1995-86922010-07-013310.16910/jemr.3.3.3Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene ViewingHsueh-Cheng Wang0Alex D. Hwang1Marc Pomplun2University of Massachusetts at BostonUniversity of Massachusetts at BostonUniversity of Massachusetts at BostonDuring text reading, the durations of eye fixations decrease with greater frequency and predictability of the currently fixated word (Rayner, 1998; 2009). However, it has not been tested whether those results also apply to scene viewing. We computed object frequency and predictability from both linguistic and visual scene analysis (LabelMe, Russell et al., 2008), and Latent Semantic Analysis (Landauer et al., 1998) was applied to estimate predictability. In a scene-viewing experiment, we found that, for small objects, linguistics-based frequency, but not scene-based frequency, had effects on first fixation duration, gaze duration, and total time. Both linguistic and scene-based predictability affected total time. Similar to reading, fixation duration decreased with higher frequency and predictability. For large objects, we found the direction of effects to be the inverse of those found in reading studies. These results suggest that the recognition of small objects in scene viewing shares some characteristics with the recognition of words in reading.https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2297scene viewingword frequencyword predictabilityLabelMelatent semantic analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hsueh-Cheng Wang
Alex D. Hwang
Marc Pomplun
spellingShingle Hsueh-Cheng Wang
Alex D. Hwang
Marc Pomplun
Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing
Journal of Eye Movement Research
scene viewing
word frequency
word predictability
LabelMe
latent semantic analysis
author_facet Hsueh-Cheng Wang
Alex D. Hwang
Marc Pomplun
author_sort Hsueh-Cheng Wang
title Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing
title_short Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing
title_full Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing
title_fullStr Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing
title_full_unstemmed Object Frequency and Predictability Effects on Eye Fixation Durations in Real-World Scene Viewing
title_sort object frequency and predictability effects on eye fixation durations in real-world scene viewing
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Journal of Eye Movement Research
issn 1995-8692
publishDate 2010-07-01
description During text reading, the durations of eye fixations decrease with greater frequency and predictability of the currently fixated word (Rayner, 1998; 2009). However, it has not been tested whether those results also apply to scene viewing. We computed object frequency and predictability from both linguistic and visual scene analysis (LabelMe, Russell et al., 2008), and Latent Semantic Analysis (Landauer et al., 1998) was applied to estimate predictability. In a scene-viewing experiment, we found that, for small objects, linguistics-based frequency, but not scene-based frequency, had effects on first fixation duration, gaze duration, and total time. Both linguistic and scene-based predictability affected total time. Similar to reading, fixation duration decreased with higher frequency and predictability. For large objects, we found the direction of effects to be the inverse of those found in reading studies. These results suggest that the recognition of small objects in scene viewing shares some characteristics with the recognition of words in reading.
topic scene viewing
word frequency
word predictability
LabelMe
latent semantic analysis
url https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2297
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AT alexdhwang objectfrequencyandpredictabilityeffectsoneyefixationdurationsinrealworldsceneviewing
AT marcpomplun objectfrequencyandpredictabilityeffectsoneyefixationdurationsinrealworldsceneviewing
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