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Modeling Saccadic Targeting in Visual Search

  • University of Rochester

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Visual cognition depends critically on the ability to make rapid eye movements known as saccades that orient the fovea over targets of interest in a visual scene. Saccades are known to be ballistic: the pattern of muscle activation for foveating a prespecified target location is computed prior to the movement and visual feedback is precluded. Despite these distinctive properties, there has been no general model of the saccadic targeting strategy employed by the human visual system during visual search in natural scenes. This paper proposes a model for saccadic targeting that uses iconic scene representations derived from oriented spatial filters at multiple scales. Visual search proceeds in a coarse-to-fine fashion with the largest scale filter responses being compared first. The model was empirically tested by comparing its performance with actual eye movement data from human subjects in a natural visual search task; preliminary results indicate substantial agreement between eye movements predicted by the model and those recorded from human subjects.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAdvances in Neural Information Processing Systems 8, NIPS 1995
EditorsD. Touretzky, M.C. Mozer, M. Hasselmo
PublisherNeural information processing systems foundation
Pages830-836
Number of pages7
ISBN (Electronic)0262201070, 9780262201070
StatePublished - 1995
Event8th Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, NIPS 1995 - Denver, United States
Duration: Nov 27 1995Nov 30 1995

Publication series

NameAdvances in Neural Information Processing Systems
Volume8
ISSN (Print)1049-5258

Conference

Conference8th Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, NIPS 1995
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityDenver
Period11/27/9511/30/95

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