4.5 Article

A Dynamical Scan-Path Model for Task-Dependence During Scene Viewing

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Volume 130, Issue 3, Pages 807-840

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/rev0000379

Keywords

scene viewing; eye movements; task dependence; individual differences; Bayesian inference

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This article discusses the eye movement behavior of human observers in real-world scene perception and introduces recent visual attention models for saliency maps. Experimental research shows that task constraints have a significant impact on eye movement behavior. The researchers propose a model for fixation positions and durations, and validate the model's effectiveness through an eye-tracking experiment.
In real-world scene perception, human observers generate sequences of fixations to move image patches into the high-acuity center of the visual field. Models of visual attention developed over the last 25 years aim to predict two-dimensional probabilities of gaze positions for a given image via saliency maps. Recently, progress has been made on models for the generation of scan paths under the constraints of saliency as well as attentional and oculomotor restrictions. Experimental research demonstrated that task constraints can have a strong impact on viewing behavior. Here, we propose a scan-path model for both fixation positions and fixation durations, which include influences of task instructions and interindividual differences. Based on an eye-movement experiment with four different task conditions, we estimated model parameters for each individual observer and task condition using a fully Bayesian dynamical modeling framework using a joint spatial-temporal likelihood approach with sequential estimation. Resulting parameter values demonstrate that model properties such as the attentional span are adjusted to task requirements. Posterior predictive checks indicate that our dynamical model can reproduce task differences in scan-path statistics across individual observers.

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