Eye movements and pupil dilation during event perception
Tim J. Smith, Martyn Whitwell, John Lee
Proceedings of the 2006 symposium on Eye tracking research & applications, 2006, pp. 48--48.
Abstract: Human observers segment ongoing activities into events that are reliable across observers [Newtson and Engquist 1976]. Segments can be small ("fine") or large ("coarse") with clusters of fine-grained segments relating hierarchically to coarse segments. Segmentation behaviour occurs even without instruction indicated by neural activity in the Medial Temporal complex (MT+)and Frontal Eye Field (FEF). Similar activation is observed during active segmentation [Zacks et al. 2001]. These two brain regions are known to be active during the processing of visual motion (MT+) and guiding saccadic eye movements (FEF). This, along with behavioural evidence [Zacks 2004], indicates that visual motion may play an important role in identifying events.
@inproceedings{10.1145-1117309.1117333,
author = {Tim J. Smith and Martyn Whitwell and John Lee},
title = {Eye movements and pupil dilation during event perception},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2006 symposium on Eye tracking research & applications},
pages = {48--48},
year = {2006},
}
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