4.5 Article

Does task-irrelevant music affect gaze allocation during real-world scene viewing?

期刊

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
卷 28, 期 6, 页码 1944-1960

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-021-01947-4

关键词

Gaze control; Music; Visual salience; Semantic informativeness; Eye tracking

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This study aimed to investigate the impact of music on gaze control, and found that music did not affect gaze behaviors, but participants in the music conditions showed better memory performance. This suggests that music may influence cognitive processes rather than gaze.
Gaze control manifests from a dynamic integration of visual and auditory information, with sound providing important cues for how a viewer should behave. Some past research suggests that music, even if entirely irrelevant to the current task demands, may also sway the timing and frequency of fixations. The current work sought to further assess this idea as well as investigate whether task-irrelevant music could also impact how gaze is spatially allocated. In preparation for a later memory test, participants studied pictures of urban scenes in silence or while simultaneously listening to one of two types of music. Eye tracking was recorded, and nine gaze behaviors were measured to characterize the temporal and spatial aspects of gaze control. Findings showed that while these gaze behaviors changed over the course of viewing, music had no impact. Participants in the music conditions, however, did show better memory performance than those who studied in silence. These findings are discussed within theories of multimodal gaze control.

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