17 results on '"Foulsham T"'
Search Results
2. Editorial: Active Vision and Perception in Human-Robot Collaboration
- Author
-
Ognibene, D, Foulsham, T, Marchegiani, L, Farinella, G, Ognibene D., Foulsham T., Marchegiani L., Farinella G. M., Ognibene, D, Foulsham, T, Marchegiani, L, Farinella, G, Ognibene D., Foulsham T., Marchegiani L., and Farinella G. M.
- Published
- 2022
3. Eye tracking: Empirical foundations for a minimal reporting guideline
- Author
-
Holmqvist, K., Örbom, S.L., Hooge, I.T.C., Niehorster, D.C., Alexander, R.G., Andersson, R., Benjamins, J.S., Blignaut, P., Brouwer, A.M., Chuang, L.L., Dalrymple, K.A., Drieghe, D., Dunn, M.J., Ettinger, U., Fiedler, S., Foulsham, T., Geest, J.N. van der, Hansen, D.W., Hutton, S.B., Kasneci, E., Kingstone, A., Knox, P.C., Kok, E.M., Lee, H., Lee, J.Y., Leppänen, J.M., Macknik, S.L., Majaranta, P., Martinez-Conde, S., Nuthmann, A., Nyström, M., Orquin, J.L., Otero-Millan, J., Park, S.Y., Popelka, S., Proudlock, F., Renkewitz, F., Roorda, A., Schulte-Mecklenbeck, M., Sharif, B., Shic, F., Shovman, M., Thomas, M.G., Venrooij, W., Zemblys, R., Hessels, R.S., Holmqvist, K., Örbom, S.L., Hooge, I.T.C., Niehorster, D.C., Alexander, R.G., Andersson, R., Benjamins, J.S., Blignaut, P., Brouwer, A.M., Chuang, L.L., Dalrymple, K.A., Drieghe, D., Dunn, M.J., Ettinger, U., Fiedler, S., Foulsham, T., Geest, J.N. van der, Hansen, D.W., Hutton, S.B., Kasneci, E., Kingstone, A., Knox, P.C., Kok, E.M., Lee, H., Lee, J.Y., Leppänen, J.M., Macknik, S.L., Majaranta, P., Martinez-Conde, S., Nuthmann, A., Nyström, M., Orquin, J.L., Otero-Millan, J., Park, S.Y., Popelka, S., Proudlock, F., Renkewitz, F., Roorda, A., Schulte-Mecklenbeck, M., Sharif, B., Shic, F., Shovman, M., Thomas, M.G., Venrooij, W., Zemblys, R., and Hessels, R.S.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 296311.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), In this paper, we present a review of how the various aspects of any study using an eye tracker (such as the instrument, methodology, environment, participant, etc.) affect the quality of the recorded eye-tracking data and the obtained eye-movement and gaze measures. We take this review to represent the empirical foundation for reporting guidelines of any study involving an eye tracker. We compare this empirical foundation to five existing reporting guidelines and to a database of 207 published eye-tracking studies. We find that reporting guidelines vary substantially and do not match with actual reporting practices. We end by deriving a minimal, flexible reporting guideline based on empirical research (Section "An empirically based minimal reporting guideline").
- Published
- 2023
4. Human body odour modulates neural processing of faces: Effective connectivity analysis using EEG
- Author
-
Ferdowsi, S, Ognibene, D, Foulsham, T, Greco, A, Callara, A, Cervera-Torres, S, Alcaniz, M, Vanello, N, Citi, L, Callara, AL, Ferdowsi, S, Ognibene, D, Foulsham, T, Greco, A, Callara, A, Cervera-Torres, S, Alcaniz, M, Vanello, N, Citi, L, and Callara, AL
- Abstract
Facial emotion processing by the brain plays a decisive role in human social interactions. This signal helps us interpret and predict people's behaviours. However, other social signals such as human voices or human body odours may facilitate or impair the identification of facial expressions. Here we studied the effects of emotional human body odours on face processing by measuring evoked neural responses and brain connectivity using the electroencephalogram (EEG). We used an emotion recognition task in which the participants attributed an emotion (i.e. happy vs fearful) to a presented face image while simultaneously exposed to emotional body odours. First, we measured face related potentials (FRP)s including P100 and N170 components. Statistical analyses revealed significant differences among FRPs recorded in different odour conditions. Second, we used a hierarchical Bayesian approach including a group dynamic causal model (DCM) followed by parametric empirical Bayes (PEB) to characterize the brain network explaining differences between FRPs. Our preliminary results suggested that different brain networks contribute to neutral face processing in the presence of different emotional body odours.
- Published
- 2023
5. Eye gaze and visual attention as a window into leadership and followership: A review of empirical insights and future directions
- Author
-
Cheng, J.T., Gerpott, F.H., Benson, A.J., Bucker, B., Foulsham, T., Lansu, T.A.M., Schülke, O., Tsuchiya, K., Cheng, J.T., Gerpott, F.H., Benson, A.J., Bucker, B., Foulsham, T., Lansu, T.A.M., Schülke, O., and Tsuchiya, K.
- Abstract
27 oktober 2022, Item does not contain fulltext, Illuminating the nature of leadership and followership requires insights into not only how leaders and followers behave, but also the different cognitions that underpin these social relationships. We argue that the roots of leader and follower roles and status asymmetries often lie in basic mental processes such as attention and visual perception. To understand not only how but also why leaders' and followers’ behavioral patterns vary, we focus here on underpinning attentional processes that often drive rank-based behaviors. Methodologically, this focus on basic attentional and perceptual processes lessens the reliance on self-report and questionnaire-based data, and expands our scientific understanding to actual, real-world leadership dynamics. Here, we review the available evidence indicating that leaders and followers differ in whether and how they receive, direct, and pay visual attention. Our review brings together diverse empirical evidence from organization science, primatology, and social, developmental, and cognitive psychology on eye gaze, attention, and status in adults, children, and non-human primates. Based on this review of the cross-disciplinary literature, we propose future directions and research questions that this attention-based approach can generate for illuminating the puzzle of leadership and followership.
- Published
- 2022
6. Editorial: Active Vision and Perception in Human-Robot Collaboration
- Author
-
Dimitri Ognibene, Tom Foulsham, Letizia Marchegiani, Giovanni Maria Farinella, Ognibene, D, Foulsham, T, Marchegiani, L, and Farinella, G
- Subjects
active vision ,Artificial Intelligence ,egocentric vision ,Biomedical Engineering ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,intention prediction ,social perception ,human-robot collaboration ,natural human-robot interaction ,ING-INF/05 - SISTEMI DI ELABORAZIONE DELLE INFORMAZIONI ,RC321-571 - Published
- 2022
7. Effects of lorazepam on saccadic eye movements - evidence from prosaccade and free viewing tasks.
- Author
-
Baumert PM, Faßbender K, Wintergerst MWM, Terheyden JH, Aslan B, Foulsham T, Harmening W, and Ettinger U
- Abstract
Rationale: Peak velocities of saccadic eye movements are reduced after benzodiazepine administration. Even though this is an established effect, past research has only examined it in horizontal prosaccade tasks., Objectives: The spectrum of saccadic eye movements, however, is much larger. Therefore, we aimed to make a first attempt at filling this research gap by testing benzodiazepine effects on saccades under different experimental task conditions., Methods: 1 mg lorazepam or placebo was administered (within-subjects, double-blind, in randomised order) to n = 30 healthy adults. Participants performed an extended version of the prosaccade task, including vertical saccade directions and different stimulus eccentricities, as well as a free viewing task., Results: Results from the prosaccade task confirmed established effects of benzodiazepines as well as saccade direction on saccadic parameters but additionally showed that the drug effect on peak velocity was independent of saccade direction. Remarkably, in the free viewing task peak velocities as well as other saccade parameters were unaffected by lorazepam. Furthermore, exploration patterns during free viewing did not change under lorazepam., Conclusions: Overall, our findings further consolidate the peak velocity of prosaccades as a biomarker of sedation. Additionally, we suggest that sedative effects of low doses of benzodiazepines may be compensated in tasks that more closely resemble natural eye movement behaviour, possibly due to the lack of time constraints or via neurophysiological processes related to volition., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Social prioritisation in scene viewing and the effects of a spatial memory load.
- Author
-
Martinez-Cedillo AP, Dent K, and Foulsham T
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Fixation, Ocular, Social Perception, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Space Perception physiology, Retention, Psychology, Attention physiology, Spatial Memory physiology
- Abstract
When free-viewing scenes, participants tend to preferentially fixate social elements (e.g., people). In the present study, we tested whether this bias would be disrupted by increasing the demands of a secondary dual-task: holding a set of (one or six) spatial locations in memory, presented either simultaneously or sequentially. Following a retention interval, participants judged whether a test location was present in the to-be-remembered stimuli. During the retention interval participants free-viewed scenes containing a social element (a person) and a non-social element (an object) that served as regions of interest. In order to assess the impact of physical salience, the non-social element was presented in both an unaltered baseline version, and in a version where its salience was artificially increased. The results showed that the preference to look at social elements decreased when the demands of the spatial memory task were increased from one to six locations, regardless of presentation mode (simultaneous or sequential). The high-load condition also resulted in more central fixations and reduced exploration of the scene. The results indicate that the social prioritisation effect, and scene viewing more generally, can be affected by a concurrent memory load., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Anaphoric distance dependencies in visual narrative structure and processing.
- Author
-
Cohn N, van Middelaar L, Foulsham T, and Schilperoord J
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Language, Linguistics, Brain physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
Linguistic syntax has often been claimed as uniquely complex due to features like anaphoric relations and distance dependencies. However, visual narratives of sequential images, like those in comics, have been argued to use sequencing mechanisms analogous to those in language. These narrative structures include "refiner" panels that "zoom in" on the contents of another panel. Similar to anaphora in language, refiners indexically connect inexplicit referential information in one unit (refiner, pronoun) to a more informative "antecedent" elsewhere in the discourse. Also like in language, refiners can follow their antecedents (anaphoric) or precede them (cataphoric), along with having either proximal or distant connections. We here explore the constraints on visual narrative refiners created by modulating these features of order and distance. Experiment 1 examined participants' preferences for where refiners are placed in a sequence using a force-choice test, which revealed that refiners are preferred to follow their antecedents and have proximal distances from them. Experiment 2 then showed that distance dependencies lead to slower self-paced viewing times. Finally, measurements of event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in Experiment 3 revealed that these patterns evoke similar brain responses as referential dependencies in language (i.e., N400, LAN, Nref). Across all three studies, the constraints and (neuro)cognitive responses to refiners parallel those shown to anaphora in language, suggesting domain-general constraints on the sequencing of referential dependencies., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Retraction Note: Eye tracking: empirical foundations for a minimal reporting guideline.
- Author
-
Holmqvist K, Örbom SL, Hooge ITC, Niehorster DC, Alexander RG, Andersson R, Benjamins JS, Blignaut P, Brouwer AM, Chuang LL, Dalrymple KA, Drieghe D, Dunn MJ, Ettinger U, Fiedler S, Foulsham T, van der Geest JN, Hansen DW, Hutton SB, Kasneci E, Kingstone A, Knox PC, Kok EM, Lee H, Lee JY, Leppänen JM, Macknik S, Majaranta P, Martinez-Conde S, Nuthmann A, Nyström M, Orquin JL, Otero-Millan J, Park SY, Popelka S, Proudlock F, Renkewitz F, Roorda A, Schulte-Mecklenbeck M, Sharif B, Shic F, Shovman M, Thomas MG, Venrooij W, Zemblys R, and Hessels RS
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Eye movements in visual impairment.
- Author
-
Verghese P, Nyström M, Foulsham T, and McGraw PV
- Subjects
- Humans, Eye Movements, Saccades, Vision, Ocular, Pursuit, Smooth, Amblyopia, Vision, Low
- Abstract
This Special Issue describes the impact of visual impairment on visuomotor function. It includes contributions that examine gaze control in conditions associated with abnormal visual development such as amblyopia, dyslexia and neurofibromatosis as well as disorders associated with field loss later in life, such as macular degeneration and stroke. Specifically, the papers address both gaze holding (fixation), and gaze-following behavior (single saccades, sequences of saccades and smooth-pursuit) that characterize active vision in daily life and evaluate the influence of both pathological and simulated field loss. Several papers address the challenges to reading and visual search; describing how the patterns of eye movements in these real-world tasks adapt to visual impairment and highlighting how they could serve as diagnostic markers of visuomotor function., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Reading the room: Autistic traits, gaze behaviour, and the ability to infer social relationships.
- Author
-
Forby L, Anderson NC, Cheng JT, Foulsham T, Karstadt B, Dawson J, Pazhoohi F, and Kingstone A
- Subjects
- Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Social Interaction, Motivation, Peer Group, Autistic Disorder
- Abstract
Individuals high in autistic traits can have difficulty understanding verbal and non-verbal cues, and may display atypical gaze behaviour during social interactions. The aim of this study was to examine differences among neurotypical individuals with high and low levels of autistic traits with regard to their gaze behaviour and their ability to assess peers' social status accurately. Fifty-four university students who completed the 10-item Autism Quotient (AQ-10) were eye-tracked as they watched six 20-second video clips of people ("targets") involved in a group decision-making task. Simulating natural, everyday social interactions, the video clips included moments of debate, humour, interruptions, and cross talk. Results showed that high-scorers on the AQ-10 (i.e., those with more autistic traits) did not differ from the low-scorers in either gaze behaviour or assessing the targets' relative social status. The results based on this neurotypical group of participants suggest that the ability of individuals high in autistic traits to read social cues may be preserved in certain tasks crucial to navigating day-to-day social relationships. These findings are discussed in terms of their implications for theory of mind, weak central coherence, and social motivation theories of autism., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Forby et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Dancing out for a voice; a narrative review of the literature exploring autism, physical activity, and dance.
- Author
-
Morris P, Hope E, Foulsham T, and Mills JP
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Exercise, Communication, Autistic Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder therapy, Dancing
- Abstract
Autism Spectrum Disorder is characterised by profound challenges with social communication and social interaction. Currently, there are few therapeutic interventions that successfully target some of the functionally impairing traits associated with autism. Furthermore, many of these interventions comprise a variety of limitations; including, limited accessibility, extensive durations, or the requirement of a trained professional to deliver the intervention. New research suggests that instead of targeting all traits associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder with a single solution, scientific research should focus on providing therapeutic tools that alleviate functionally impairing facets specific to the individual. Owing to the nature of physical activity, sports, and dance (coordinated movement) these activities could provide opportunities to enhance communication skills and social development in autistic children. Therefore, this paper gives a narrative overview of the literature surrounding communication and coordinated movement; outlining what is meant by communication challenges, exploring the benefits of coordinated movement for traits associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder, and delineating how coordinated movement elicits positive outcomes for autistic children., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Crown Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Eye tracking: empirical foundations for a minimal reporting guideline.
- Author
-
Holmqvist K, Örbom SL, Hooge ITC, Niehorster DC, Alexander RG, Andersson R, Benjamins JS, Blignaut P, Brouwer AM, Chuang LL, Dalrymple KA, Drieghe D, Dunn MJ, Ettinger U, Fiedler S, Foulsham T, van der Geest JN, Hansen DW, Hutton SB, Kasneci E, Kingstone A, Knox PC, Kok EM, Lee H, Lee JY, Leppänen JM, Macknik S, Majaranta P, Martinez-Conde S, Nuthmann A, Nyström M, Orquin JL, Otero-Millan J, Park SY, Popelka S, Proudlock F, Renkewitz F, Roorda A, Schulte-Mecklenbeck M, Sharif B, Shic F, Shovman M, Thomas MG, Venrooij W, Zemblys R, and Hessels RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Empirical Research, Eye-Tracking Technology, Eye Movements
- Abstract
In this paper, we present a review of how the various aspects of any study using an eye tracker (such as the instrument, methodology, environment, participant, etc.) affect the quality of the recorded eye-tracking data and the obtained eye-movement and gaze measures. We take this review to represent the empirical foundation for reporting guidelines of any study involving an eye tracker. We compare this empirical foundation to five existing reporting guidelines and to a database of 207 published eye-tracking studies. We find that reporting guidelines vary substantially and do not match with actual reporting practices. We end by deriving a minimal, flexible reporting guideline based on empirical research (Section "An empirically based minimal reporting guideline")., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Do cognitive load and ADHD traits affect the tendency to prioritise social information in scenes?
- Author
-
Priscilla Martinez-Cedillo A, Dent K, and Foulsham T
- Subjects
- Cognition, Humans, Memory, Short-Term, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity, Fixation, Ocular
- Abstract
We report two experiments investigating the effect of working memory (WM) load on selective attention. Experiment 1 was a modified version of Lavie et al. and confirmed that increasing memory load disrupted performance in the classic flanker task. Experiment 2 used the same manipulation of WM load to probe attention during the viewing of complex scenes while also investigating individual differences in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) traits. In the image-viewing task, we measured the degree to which fixations targeted each of two crucial objects: (1) a social object (a person in the scene) and (2) a non-social object of higher or lower physical salience. We compared the extent to which increasing WM load would change the pattern of viewing of the physically salient and socially salient objects. If attending to the social item requires greater default voluntary top-down resources, then the viewing of social objects should show stronger modulation by WM load compared with viewing of physically salient objects. The results showed that the social object was fixated to a greater degree than the other object (regardless of physical salience). Increased salience drew fixations away from the background leading to slightly increased fixations on the non-social object, without changing fixations on the social object. Increased levels of ADHD-like traits were associated with fewer fixations on the social object, but only in the high-salient, low-load condition. Importantly, WM load did not affect the number of fixations on the social object. Such findings suggest rather surprisingly that attending to a social area in complex stimuli is not dependent on the availability of voluntary top-down resources.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Meaning above (and in) the head: Combinatorial visual morphology from comics and emoji.
- Author
-
Cohn N and Foulsham T
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Language, Male, Reaction Time physiology, Semantics, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials physiology
- Abstract
Compositionality is a primary feature of language, but graphics can also create combinatorial meaning, like with items above faces (e.g., lightbulbs to mean inspiration). We posit that these "upfixes" (i.e., upwards affixes) involve a productive schema enabling both stored and novel face-upfix dyads. In two experiments, participants viewed either conventional (e.g., lightbulb) or unconventional (e.g., clover-leaves) upfixes with faces which either matched (e.g., lightbulb/smile) or mismatched (e.g., lightbulb/frown). In Experiment 1, matching dyads sponsored higher comprehensibility ratings and faster response times, modulated by conventionality. In Experiment 2, event-related brain potentials (ERPs) revealed conventional upfixes, regardless of matching, evoked larger N250s, indicating perceptual expertise, but mismatching and unconventional dyads elicited larger semantic processing costs (N400) than conventional-matching dyads. Yet mismatches evoked a late negativity, suggesting congruent novel dyads remained construable compared with violations. These results support that combinatorial graphics involve a constrained productive schema, similar to the lexicon of language., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Editorial: Active Vision and Perception in Human-Robot Collaboration.
- Author
-
Ognibene D, Foulsham T, Marchegiani L, and Farinella GM
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.