DocumentCode
395505
Title
Ambiguous figures, fixation durations, and the bus paradox
Author
van Leewen, C. ; Aukes, MaarGe ; Luman, Marjolein
Author_Institution
Lab. for Perceptual Dynamics, RIKEN BSI, Saitama, Japan
Volume
3
fYear
2002
fDate
18-22 Nov. 2002
Firstpage
1164
Abstract
Perceptual switching, or the reversal of ambiguous figures, is an extensively studied phenomenon in visual perception. Eye-movement studies have investigated the relation between switching behaviour and fixation duration, the interval between saccades. Ellis-Stark (1978) compared the average length of the interval in which a switch is reported to that of the surrounding intervals. They found that fixation durations are longer for intervals that contain a switch than for surrounding intervals. These observations, however, are highly susceptible to a sampling error called the ´bus paradox´. It did not report any bias control. A replication of their experiment is presented, in which bias control was applied to the fixation durations. The result shows an effect opposite to Ellis-Stark´s approach; fixations in which a switch is reported are shorter than surrounding fixations.
Keywords
psychology; visual perception; bias control; blinks; bus paradox; eye-movement; fixation durations; saccades; visual perception; Electrophysiology; Fluctuations; Psychology; Sampling methods; Size measurement; Switches;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Neural Information Processing, 2002. ICONIP '02. Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on
Print_ISBN
981-04-7524-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICONIP.2002.1202804
Filename
1202804
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