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      Eye guidance in natural vision: reinterpreting salience.

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          Abstract

          Models of gaze allocation in complex scenes are derived mainly from studies of static picture viewing. The dominant framework to emerge has been image salience, where properties of the stimulus play a crucial role in guiding the eyes. However, salience-based schemes are poor at accounting for many aspects of picture viewing and can fail dramatically in the context of natural task performance. These failures have led to the development of new models of gaze allocation in scene viewing that address a number of these issues. However, models based on the picture-viewing paradigm are unlikely to generalize to a broader range of experimental contexts, because the stimulus context is limited, and the dynamic, task-driven nature of vision is not represented. We argue that there is a need to move away from this class of model and find the principles that govern gaze allocation in a broader range of settings. We outline the major limitations of salience-based selection schemes and highlight what we have learned from studies of gaze allocation in natural vision. Clear principles of selection are found across many instances of natural vision and these are not the principles that might be expected from picture-viewing studies. We discuss the emerging theoretical framework for gaze allocation on the basis of reward maximization and uncertainty reduction.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Vis
          Journal of vision
          Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)
          1534-7362
          1534-7362
          May 27 2011
          : 11
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Psychology, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK. b.w.tatler@dundee.ac.uk
          Article
          11.5.5 NIHMS301975
          10.1167/11.5.5
          3134223
          21622729
          3ee4aab6-9e19-448b-8a34-184c9fe0c05c
          History

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