Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task

The goal of the present study was to examine whether intention type affects eye movement patterns in a change detection task In addition, we assessed whether the eye movement index could be used to identify human implicit intent. We attempted to generate three types of intent amongst the study parti...

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Main Authors: Sangil Lee, Minho Lee, Hyeonggyu Park, Mun-Seon Chang, Ho-Wan Kwak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2015-08-01
Series:Journal of Eye Movement Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2402
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spelling doaj-07831b079eea48f8a6a2f11749bcafaa2021-05-28T13:34:14ZengBern Open PublishingJournal of Eye Movement Research1995-86922015-08-018210.16910/jemr.8.2.5Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection taskSangil Lee0Minho Lee1Hyeonggyu Park2Mun-Seon Chang3Ho-Wan Kwak4Kyungpook National University, Republic of KoreaKyungpook National University, Republic of KoreaKyungpook National University, Republic of KoreaKyungpook National University, Republic of KoreaKyungpook National University, Republic of KoreaThe goal of the present study was to examine whether intention type affects eye movement patterns in a change detection task In addition, we assessed whether the eye movement index could be used to identify human implicit intent. We attempted to generate three types of intent amongst the study participants, dividing them into one of three conditions; each condition received different information regarding an impending change to the visual stimuli. In the “navigational intent” condition, participants were asked to look for any interesting objects, and were not given any more information about the impending change. In the “low-specific intent” condition, participants were informed that a change would occur. In the “high-specific intent” condition, participants were told that a change would occur, and that an object would disappear. In addition to this main change detection task, participants also had to perform a primary task, in which they were required to name aloud the colors of objects in the pre-change scene. This allowed us to control for the visual searching process during the pre-change scene. The main results were as follows: firstly, the primary task successfully controlled for the visual search process during the pre-change scene, establishing that there were no differences in the patterns of eye movements across all three conditions despite differing intents. Secondly, we observed significantly different patterns of eye movement between the conditions in the post-change scene, suggesting that generating a specific intent for change detection yields a distinctive pattern of eye-movements. Finally, discriminant function analysis showed a reasonable classification rate for identifying a specific intent. Taken together, it was found that both participant intent and the specificity of information provided to the participants affect eye movements in a change detection task.https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2402implicit intenttypes of intenteye-movementchange detection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sangil Lee
Minho Lee
Hyeonggyu Park
Mun-Seon Chang
Ho-Wan Kwak
spellingShingle Sangil Lee
Minho Lee
Hyeonggyu Park
Mun-Seon Chang
Ho-Wan Kwak
Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
Journal of Eye Movement Research
implicit intent
types of intent
eye-movement
change detection
author_facet Sangil Lee
Minho Lee
Hyeonggyu Park
Mun-Seon Chang
Ho-Wan Kwak
author_sort Sangil Lee
title Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
title_short Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
title_full Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
title_fullStr Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
title_full_unstemmed Effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
title_sort effects of search intent on eye-movement patterns in a change detection task
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Journal of Eye Movement Research
issn 1995-8692
publishDate 2015-08-01
description The goal of the present study was to examine whether intention type affects eye movement patterns in a change detection task In addition, we assessed whether the eye movement index could be used to identify human implicit intent. We attempted to generate three types of intent amongst the study participants, dividing them into one of three conditions; each condition received different information regarding an impending change to the visual stimuli. In the “navigational intent” condition, participants were asked to look for any interesting objects, and were not given any more information about the impending change. In the “low-specific intent” condition, participants were informed that a change would occur. In the “high-specific intent” condition, participants were told that a change would occur, and that an object would disappear. In addition to this main change detection task, participants also had to perform a primary task, in which they were required to name aloud the colors of objects in the pre-change scene. This allowed us to control for the visual searching process during the pre-change scene. The main results were as follows: firstly, the primary task successfully controlled for the visual search process during the pre-change scene, establishing that there were no differences in the patterns of eye movements across all three conditions despite differing intents. Secondly, we observed significantly different patterns of eye movement between the conditions in the post-change scene, suggesting that generating a specific intent for change detection yields a distinctive pattern of eye-movements. Finally, discriminant function analysis showed a reasonable classification rate for identifying a specific intent. Taken together, it was found that both participant intent and the specificity of information provided to the participants affect eye movements in a change detection task.
topic implicit intent
types of intent
eye-movement
change detection
url https://bop.unibe.ch/JEMR/article/view/2402
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AT hyeonggyupark effectsofsearchintentoneyemovementpatternsinachangedetectiontask
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