Algorithms for Defining Visual Regions-of-Interest: Comparison with Eye Fixations
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
Eye Tracking as a New Interface for Image Retrieval
BT Technology Journal
Spontaneous eye movements during visual imagery reflect the content of the visual scene
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Visual attention, visual saliency, and eye movements during the inspection of natural scenes
IWINAC'05 Proceedings of the First international work-conference on the Interplay Between Natural and Artificial Computation conference on Artificial Intelligence and Knowledge Engineering Applications: a bioinspired approach - Volume Part II
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Two experiments examined the eye movements made when remembering pictures of real-world objects and scenes, and when those images are imagined rather than inspected. In Experiment 1 arrays of simple objects were first shown, and eye movements used to indicate the location of an object declared as having been present in the array. Experiment 2 investigated the similarity of eye fixation scanpaths between the initial encoding of a picture of a real-world scene and a second viewing of a picture and when trying to imagine that picture using memory. Closer similarities were observed between phases that involved more similar tasks, and the scanpaths were just as similar when the task was presented immediately or after two days. The possibility raised by these results is that images can be retrieved from memory by re-instating the sequence of fixations made during their initial encoding.