Are eye movements involved in cued target recall from repeating spatial contexts? Incollection
McNamara, D S; Trafton, J G (Ed.): The 29th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, pp. 1515-1520, Cognitive Science Society, Austin, TX, 2007.
@incollection{myers07csc,
title = {Are eye movements involved in cued target recall from repeating spatial contexts?},
author = { Christopher W. Myers and Wayne D. Gray},
editor = {McNamara, D. S. and Trafton, J. G.},
year = {2007},
date = {2007-01-01},
booktitle = {The 29th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society},
pages = {1515-1520},
publisher = {Cognitive Science Society},
address = {Austin, TX},
abstract = {Across two experiments we set out to determine if visual scans adapt to repeatedly searched stimuli. We adopt a paradigm reported to produce cueing effects from repeatedly searching the same stimulus (Chun & Jiang, 1998). We discover that eye movements may be useful to the cueing process, and that the cueing phenomenon is finicky.},
keywords = {contextual cueing, Rational analysis, scanpath, soft constraints, visual scanning},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {incollection}
}
Across two experiments we set out to determine if visual scans adapt to repeatedly searched stimuli. We adopt a paradigm reported to produce cueing effects from repeatedly searching the same stimulus (Chun & Jiang, 1998). We discover that eye movements may be useful to the cueing process, and that the cueing phenomenon is finicky.