| Sebastian Pannasch | Applied Cognitive Research/Psychology III, Technische Universitaet Dresden |
| Jens R. Helmert | Applied Cognitive Research/Psychology III, Technische Universitaet Dresden |
| Katharina Roth | Department of Psychiatry, University of Bonn |
| Ann-Katrin Herbold | Department of Psychiatry, University of Bonn |
| Henrik Walter | Department of Psychiatry, University of Bonn |
Is there any relationship between visual fixation durations and saccade amplitudes in free exploration of pictures and scenes? In four experiments with naturalistic stimuli, we compared eye movements during early and late phases of scene perception. Influences of repeated presentation of similar stimuli (Experiment 1), object density (Experiment 2), emotional stimuli (Experiment 3) and mood induction (Experiment 4) were examined. The results demonstrate a systematic increase in the durations of fixations and a decrease for saccadic amplitudes over the time course of scene perception. This relationship was very stable across the variety of studied conditions. It can be interpreted in terms of a shifting balance of the two modes of visual information processing.
Received: August 6, 2008
Published: December 16, 2008
Pannasch, S., Helmert, J.R., Roth, K., Herbold, A.K. & Walter, H. (2008). Visual Fixation Durations and Saccade Amplitudes: Shifting Relationship in a Variety of Conditions. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 2(2):4, 1-19.
Graphs pages 6 and 8
Eye movements
Fixation duration
Saccade amplitude
Two visual systems
Scene perception
Text format
IAPS
Mood induction