TY - JOUR
T1 - Using CRISP to model global characteristics of fixation durations in scene viewing and reading with a common mechanism.
AU - Nuthmann, Antje
AU - Henderson, John
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Fixation durations vary when we read text or inspect a natural scene. Past studies suggest that this variability is controlled by the visual input available within the current fixation. The present study directly compared the control of fixation durations in reading and scene viewing in a common experimental paradigm, and attempted to account for the control of these durations within a common modelling framework using the CRISP architecture (Nuthmann, Smith, Engbert, & Henderson, 2010). In the experimental paradigm, a stimulus onset delay paradigm was used. A visual mask was presented at the beginning of critical fixations, which delayed the onset of the text or scene, and the length of the delay was varied. Irrespective of task, two populations of fixation durations were observed. One population of fixations was under the direct control of the current stimulus, increasing in duration as delay increased. A second population of fixation durations was relatively constant across delay. Additional task-specific quantitative differences in the adjustment of fixation durations were found. The pattern of mixed control of fixation durations obtained for scene viewing has been previously simulated with the CRISP model of fixation durations. In the present work, the model's generality was tested by applying its architecture to the text reading data, with task-specific influences realized by different parameter settings. The results of the numerical simulations suggest that global characteristics of fixation durations in scene viewing and reading can be explained by a common mechanism.
AB - Fixation durations vary when we read text or inspect a natural scene. Past studies suggest that this variability is controlled by the visual input available within the current fixation. The present study directly compared the control of fixation durations in reading and scene viewing in a common experimental paradigm, and attempted to account for the control of these durations within a common modelling framework using the CRISP architecture (Nuthmann, Smith, Engbert, & Henderson, 2010). In the experimental paradigm, a stimulus onset delay paradigm was used. A visual mask was presented at the beginning of critical fixations, which delayed the onset of the text or scene, and the length of the delay was varied. Irrespective of task, two populations of fixation durations were observed. One population of fixations was under the direct control of the current stimulus, increasing in duration as delay increased. A second population of fixation durations was relatively constant across delay. Additional task-specific quantitative differences in the adjustment of fixation durations were found. The pattern of mixed control of fixation durations obtained for scene viewing has been previously simulated with the CRISP model of fixation durations. In the present work, the model's generality was tested by applying its architecture to the text reading data, with task-specific influences realized by different parameter settings. The results of the numerical simulations suggest that global characteristics of fixation durations in scene viewing and reading can be explained by a common mechanism.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84862177925&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13506285.2012.670142
DO - 10.1080/13506285.2012.670142
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84862177925
SN - 1350-6285
VL - 20
SP - 457
EP - 494
JO - Visual Cognition
JF - Visual Cognition
IS - (4-5)
ER -