Previous studies showed that the small leftward bias found in healthy humans’ spatial judgments of lines (“pseudoneglect”) shifts to the right with increasing distance between stimuli and observer. In this study, we investigated whether such a modulation of attentional asymmetry can also be observed in free visual exploration. Participants freely explored photographs of naturalistic scenes for 7 s in near (60 cm) and far (140 cm) space. After an initial leftward bias, followed by a compensatory rightward bias, gaze positions were significantly more leftward in near compared to far space (around 4 s from scene onset). Our results show that the modulation of attentional asymmetries by viewing distance previously reported for spatial judgments generalizes to free visual exploration, and we revealed the temporal dynamics of these asymmetries by fine-grained eye movement analysis. In contrast, an effect of viewing distance was reduced or absent when eye movements are under strong top-down control, as in systematic serial visual search (Sensitive Negelct Test). Finally, there was no effect of viewing distance in the landmark task (as also reported in a minority of other studies), suggesting that this effect may depend on specific, yet unidentified task characteristics.

Hartmann, M., Sommer, N., Diana, L., Muri, R., Eberhard-Moscicka, A. (2019). Further to the right: Viewing distance modulates attentional asymmetries (‘pseudoneglect’) during visual exploration. BRAIN AND COGNITION, 129, 40-48 [10.1016/j.bandc.2018.11.008].

Further to the right: Viewing distance modulates attentional asymmetries (‘pseudoneglect’) during visual exploration

Diana L.;
2019

Abstract

Previous studies showed that the small leftward bias found in healthy humans’ spatial judgments of lines (“pseudoneglect”) shifts to the right with increasing distance between stimuli and observer. In this study, we investigated whether such a modulation of attentional asymmetry can also be observed in free visual exploration. Participants freely explored photographs of naturalistic scenes for 7 s in near (60 cm) and far (140 cm) space. After an initial leftward bias, followed by a compensatory rightward bias, gaze positions were significantly more leftward in near compared to far space (around 4 s from scene onset). Our results show that the modulation of attentional asymmetries by viewing distance previously reported for spatial judgments generalizes to free visual exploration, and we revealed the temporal dynamics of these asymmetries by fine-grained eye movement analysis. In contrast, an effect of viewing distance was reduced or absent when eye movements are under strong top-down control, as in systematic serial visual search (Sensitive Negelct Test). Finally, there was no effect of viewing distance in the landmark task (as also reported in a minority of other studies), suggesting that this effect may depend on specific, yet unidentified task characteristics.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Attentional asymmetry; Eye movements; Landmark task; Pseudoneglect; Sensitive Neglect Task; Visual exploration;
English
2019
129
40
48
none
Hartmann, M., Sommer, N., Diana, L., Muri, R., Eberhard-Moscicka, A. (2019). Further to the right: Viewing distance modulates attentional asymmetries (‘pseudoneglect’) during visual exploration. BRAIN AND COGNITION, 129, 40-48 [10.1016/j.bandc.2018.11.008].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/525486
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