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Eye-tracking study of animate objects

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2009
876.pdf (351.4Kb)
Authors
Ković, Vanja
Plunkett, Kim
Westermann, Gert
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
This study involved presentation of animate objects under labelling and non-labelling conditions and examination of participants' looking pattern across these conditions. Results revealed a surprisingly consistent way in which adults look at the pictures of animate objects. The head/eyes of the animals were a typical region attracting a number of fixations, but also some other parts of animals (e.g. the tail in cats, or the udder in cows and the body in snakes). Furthermore, not only did participants tend to look at similar regions of the pictures of animate objects, but also the looking order to these regions was consistent across participants. However, contrary to the original predictions, these patterns of fixations were similar across the naming and non-naming conditions ('Look at the lt target gt !', 'Look at the picture!' and 'What's this?', respectively), which led to the conclusion that participants' consistency in processing animate objects was not reflecting underlying men...tal representation evoked by labels, but was rather driven by the structural similarity of animate objects, in particular the presence of a head.

Keywords:
mental representations / eye-tracking / animate objects
Source:
Psihologija, 2009, 42, 3, 307-327
Publisher:
  • Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd

DOI: 10.2298/PSI0903307K

ISSN: 0048-5705

WoS: 000269261600003

Scopus: 2-s2.0-77950529559
[ Google Scholar ]
10
7
URI
http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/879
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researcher's publications - Odeljenje za psihologiju
Institution/Community
Psihologija / Psychology
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ković, Vanja
AU  - Plunkett, Kim
AU  - Westermann, Gert
PY  - 2009
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/879
AB  - This study involved presentation of animate objects under labelling and non-labelling conditions and examination of participants' looking pattern across these conditions. Results revealed a surprisingly consistent way in which adults look at the pictures of animate objects. The head/eyes of the animals were a typical region attracting a number of fixations, but also some other parts of animals (e.g. the tail in cats, or the udder in cows and the body in snakes). Furthermore, not only did participants tend to look at similar regions of the pictures of animate objects, but also the looking order to these regions was consistent across participants. However, contrary to the original predictions, these patterns of fixations were similar across the naming and non-naming conditions ('Look at the  lt  target  gt !', 'Look at the picture!' and 'What's this?', respectively), which led to the conclusion that participants' consistency in processing animate objects was not reflecting underlying mental representation evoked by labels, but was rather driven by the structural similarity of animate objects, in particular the presence of a head.
PB  - Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd
T2  - Psihologija
T1  - Eye-tracking study of animate objects
EP  - 327
IS  - 3
SP  - 307
VL  - 42
DO  - 10.2298/PSI0903307K
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ković, Vanja and Plunkett, Kim and Westermann, Gert",
year = "2009",
abstract = "This study involved presentation of animate objects under labelling and non-labelling conditions and examination of participants' looking pattern across these conditions. Results revealed a surprisingly consistent way in which adults look at the pictures of animate objects. The head/eyes of the animals were a typical region attracting a number of fixations, but also some other parts of animals (e.g. the tail in cats, or the udder in cows and the body in snakes). Furthermore, not only did participants tend to look at similar regions of the pictures of animate objects, but also the looking order to these regions was consistent across participants. However, contrary to the original predictions, these patterns of fixations were similar across the naming and non-naming conditions ('Look at the  lt  target  gt !', 'Look at the picture!' and 'What's this?', respectively), which led to the conclusion that participants' consistency in processing animate objects was not reflecting underlying mental representation evoked by labels, but was rather driven by the structural similarity of animate objects, in particular the presence of a head.",
publisher = "Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd",
journal = "Psihologija",
title = "Eye-tracking study of animate objects",
pages = "327-307",
number = "3",
volume = "42",
doi = "10.2298/PSI0903307K"
}
Ković, V., Plunkett, K.,& Westermann, G.. (2009). Eye-tracking study of animate objects. in Psihologija
Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd., 42(3), 307-327.
https://doi.org/10.2298/PSI0903307K
Ković V, Plunkett K, Westermann G. Eye-tracking study of animate objects. in Psihologija. 2009;42(3):307-327.
doi:10.2298/PSI0903307K .
Ković, Vanja, Plunkett, Kim, Westermann, Gert, "Eye-tracking study of animate objects" in Psihologija, 42, no. 3 (2009):307-327,
https://doi.org/10.2298/PSI0903307K . .

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