4.5 Article

Objects are selected for attention based upon meaning during passive scene viewing

Journal

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-023-02286-2

Keywords

Scene perception; Eye movements; Meaning; Physical salience; Objects; Attention

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This study demonstrated that fixations are more likely to land on high-meaning objects than low-meaning objects during passive scene viewing, regardless of other factors. It suggests that object meaning plays a role in attentional selection during passive viewing.
While object meaning has been demonstrated to guide attention during active scene viewing and object salience guides attention during passive viewing, it is unknown whether object meaning predicts attention in passive viewing tasks and whether attention during passive viewing is more strongly related to meaning or salience. To answer this question, we used a mixed modeling approach where we computed the average meaning and physical salience of objects in scenes while statistically controlling for the roles of object size and eccentricity. Using eye-movement data from aesthetic judgment and memorization tasks, we then tested whether fixations are more likely to land on high-meaning objects than low-meaning objects while controlling for object salience, size, and eccentricity. The results demonstrated that fixations are more likely to be directed to high meaning objects than low meaning objects regardless of these other factors. Further analyses revealed that fixation durations were positively associated with object meaning irrespective of the other object properties. Overall, these findings provide the first evidence that objects are, in part, selected by meaning for attentional selection during passive scene viewing.

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