Meghanathan, Radha Nila; van Leeuwen, Cees; 77138; Giannini, Marcello; Nikolaev, Andrey R; 84223;
Eye movement research has shown that attention shifts from the currently fixated location to the next before a saccade is executed. We investigated whether the cost of the attention shift depends on higher-order processing at the time of fixation, in particular on visual working memory load differences between fixations and refixations on task-rele...
Van Acker, Bram Bombeke, Klaas Durnez, Wouter Parmentier, Davy Costa Mateus, João Eduardo Biondi, Alessandro Saldien, Jelle Vlerick, Peter
Human operators in the upcoming Industry 4.0 workplace will face accelerating job demands such as elevated cognitive complexity. Unobtrusive objective measures of mental workload (MWL) are therefore in high demand as indicated by both theory and practice. This pilot study explored the wearability and external validity of pupillometry, a MWL measure...
Vansteenkiste, Pieter Lenoir, Matthieu Bourgois, Jan
For lifeguards, recognizing a swimmer in trouble is a key factor in the rescue process. Although reports show that lifeguards outperform non-lifeguards in their surveillance task, it is unclear to what extent this difference is reflected in gaze behaviour. In the current study, gaze behaviour of nine novice and seven experienced beach lifeguards wa...
Nikolaev, Andrey R; 84223; Meghanathan, Radha Nila; 92919; van Leeuwen, Cees; 77138;
In free viewing, the eyes return to previously visited locations rather frequently, even though the attentional and memory-related processes controlling eye-movement show a strong antirefixation bias. To overcome this bias, a special refixation triggering mechanism may have to be recruited. We probed the neural evidence for such a mechanism by comb...
Cracco, Emiel Brass, Marcel
Although it is well known that action observation triggers an imitative response, not much is known about how these responses develop as a function of group size. Research on social contagion suggests that imitative tendencies initially increase but then stabilize as groups become larger. However, these findings have mainly been explained in terms ...
Di Rosa, Elisa Bardi, Lara Umiltà, Carlo Masina, Fabio Forgione, Margherita Mapelli, Daniela
Published in
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
The concept of stimulus response compatibility (SRC) refers to the existence of a privileged association between a specific stimulus feature and a specific response feature. Two examples of SRC are the Spatial Numerical Association of Response Codes (SNARC) and the Markedness Association of Response Codes (MARC) effects. According to the polarity c...
Ooms, Kristien Coltekin, Arzu De Maeyer, Philippe Dupont, Lien Fabrikant, Sara Incoul, Annelies Kuhn, Matthias Slabbinck, Hendrik Vansteenkiste, Pieter Van der Haegen, Lise
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User evaluations of interactive and dynamic applications face various challenges related to the active nature of these displays. For example, users can often zoom and pan on digital products, and these interactions cause changes in the extent and/or level of detail of the stimulus. Therefore, in eye tracking studies, when a user’s gaze is at a part...
Ooms, Kristien Dupont, Lien Lapon, Lieselot Popelka, Stanislav
This article compares the accuracy and precision of the low-cost Eye Tribe tracker and a well-established comparable eye tracker: SMI RED 250. Participants were instructed to fixate on predefined point locations on a screen. The accuracy is measured by the distance between the recorded fixation locations and the actual location. Precision is repres...
Deeb, Rasha Ooms, Kristien Brychtová, Alžběta Van Eetvelde, Veerle De Maeyer, Philippe
Calderon, CB Verguts, Tom Gevers, W
For selecting an action, traditional theories suggest a cognitive architecture made of serial processing units. Others suggested that action selection emerges from the parallel implementation of and competition between multiple action plans. To disentangle these 2 hypotheses, we created a reaching task assessing the temporal dynamics of action sele...