UID:
almahu_9948026112802882
Format:
1 online resource (481 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
ISBN:
1-280-92726-7
,
9786610927265
,
0-08-050623-2
Content:
The distinguished contributors to this volume have been set the problem of describing how we know where to move our eyes. There is a great deal of current interest in the use of eye movement recordings to investigate various mental processes. The common theme is that variations in eye movements indicate variations in the processing of what is being perceived, whether in reading, driving or scene perception. However, a number of problems of interpretation are now emerging, and this edited volume sets out to address these problems. The book investigates controversies concerning the variations in
Note:
Description based upon print version of record.
,
Front Cover; Eye Guidance in Reading and Scene Perception; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Contributors; Chapter 1. Eye Guidance and Visual Information Processing: Reading, Visual Search, Picture Perception and Driving; Chapter 2. Definition and Computation of Oculomotor Measures in the Study of Cognitive Processes; Chapter 3. Eye Movements and Measures of Reading Time; Chapter 4. Determinants of Fixation Positions in Words During Reading; Chapter 5. About Regressive Saccades in Reading and Their Relation to Word Identification
,
Chapter 6. Word Skipping: Implications for Theories of Eye Movement Control in ReadingChapter 7. The Influence of Parafoveal Words on Foveal Inspection Time: Evidence for a Processing Trade-Off; Chapter 8. Parafoveal Pragmatics; Chapter 9. Foveal Processing Load and Landing Position Effects in Reading; Chapter 10. Individual Differences in Reading and Eye Movement Control; Chapter 11. Eye Movement Control in Reading: An Overview and Model; Chapter 12. Eye Movements During Scene Viewing: An Overview; Chapter 13. Eye Guidance and Visual Search
,
Chapter 14. Prefixational Object Perception in Scenes: Objects Popping Out of SchemasChapter 15. Functional Division of the Visual Field: Moving Masks and Moving Windows; Chapter 16. Film Perception. The Processing of Film Cuts; Chapter 17. Visual Search of Dynamic Scenes: Event Types and the Role of Experience in Viewing Driving Situations; Chapter 18. How Much Do Novice Drivers See? The Effects of Demand on Visual Search Strategies in Novice and Experienced Drivers; Chapter 19. The Development of the Eye Movement Strategies of Learner Drivers
,
Chapter 20. What the Driver's Eye Tells the Car's BrainAuthor Index; Subject Index
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-08-043361-8
Language:
English
Bookmarklink