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Visual memory for fixated regions of natural images dissociates attraction and recognition

journal contribution
posted on 2023-07-26, 13:30 authored by Ian van der Linde, Umesh Rajashekar, Alan C. Bovik, Lawrence K. Cormack
Recognition memory for fixated regions from briefly viewed full-screen natural images is examined. Low-level image statistics reveal that observers fixated, on average (pooled across images and observers), image regions that possessed greater visual saliency than non-fixated regions, a finding that is robust across multiple fixation indices. Recognition-memory performance indicates that, of the fixation loci tested, observers were adept at recognising those with a particular profile of image statistics; visual saliency was found to be attenuated for unrecognised loci, despite that all regions were freely fixated. Furthermore, although elevated luminance was the local image statistic found to discriminate least between human and random image locations, it was the greatest predictor of recognition-memory performance, demonstrating a dissociation between image features that draw fixations and those that support visual memory. An analysis of corresponding eye movements indicates that image regions fixated via short-distance saccades enjoyed better recognition-memory performance, alluding to a focal rather than ambient mode of processing. Recognised image regions were more likely to have originated from areas evaluated (a posteriori) to have higher fixation density, a numerical metric of local interest. Surprisingly, memory for image regions fixated later in the viewing period exhibited no recency advantage, despite (typically) also being longer in duration, a finding for which a number of explanations are posited.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

38

Issue number

8

Page range

1152-1171

Publication title

Perception

ISSN

1468-4233

Publisher

SAGE

Language

  • other

Legacy posted date

2014-02-06

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

ARCHIVED Faculty of Science & Technology (until September 2018)

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