Li Xingshan, Logan Gordon D, Zbrodoff N Jane
Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2010 Feb;72(2):409-26. doi: 10.3758/APP.72.2.409.
Two experiments addressed the coupling between eye movements and the cognitive processes underlying enumeration. Experiment 1 compared eye movements in a counting task with those in a "look" task, in which subjects were told to look at each dot in a pattern once and only once. Experiment 2 presented the same dot patterns to every subject twice, to measure the consistency with which dots were fixated between and within subjects. In both experiments, the number of fixations increased linearly with the number of objects to be enumerated, consistent with tight coupling between eye movements and enumeration. However, analyses of fixation locations showed that subjects tended to look at dots in dense, central regions of the display and tended not to look at dots in sparse, peripheral regions of the display, suggesting a looser coupling between eye movements and enumeration. Thus, the eyes do not mirror the enumeration process very directly.
两项实验研究了眼动与计数背后的认知过程之间的耦合关系。实验1将计数任务中的眼动与“注视”任务中的眼动进行了比较,在“注视”任务中,受试者被告知对一个图案中的每个点只看一次且仅看一次。实验2向每位受试者两次呈现相同的点图案,以测量受试者之间以及受试者内部注视点的一致性。在这两项实验中,注视次数均随待计数物体的数量线性增加,这与眼动和计数之间的紧密耦合一致。然而,对注视位置的分析表明,受试者倾向于注视显示屏密集的中央区域中的点,而倾向于不注视显示屏稀疏的外围区域中的点,这表明眼动和计数之间的耦合较为松散。因此,眼睛并不能非常直接地反映计数过程。