Aix-Marseille University.
Department of Cognitive Psychology, VU University Amsterdam.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2015 Jun;144(3):513-21. doi: 10.1037/a0039168. Epub 2015 Apr 13.
Here we report that large pupils predict fixations of the eye on low-salient, inconspicuous parts of a visual scene. We interpret this as showing that mental effort, reflected by a dilation of the pupil, is required to guide gaze toward objects that are relevant to current goals, but that may not be very salient. When mental effort is low, reflected by a constriction of the pupil, the eyes tend to be captured by high-salient parts of the image, irrespective of top-down goals. The relationship between pupil size and visual saliency was not driven by luminance or a range of other factors that we considered. Crucially, the relationship was strongest when mental effort was invested exclusively in eye-movement control (i.e., reduced in a dual-task setting), which suggests that it is not due to general effort or arousal. Our finding illustrates that goal-driven control during scene viewing requires mental effort, and that pupil size can be used as an online measure to track the goal-drivenness of behavior.
在这里,我们报告说,瞳孔放大预示着眼睛会注视视觉场景中低显著度、不显眼的部分。我们的解释是,瞳孔的扩大反映了心理努力,这种努力需要引导目光朝向与当前目标相关但可能不太显著的物体。当心理努力较低,即瞳孔收缩时,眼睛往往会被图像的高显著度部分所吸引,而不管自上而下的目标如何。瞳孔大小与视觉显著性之间的关系不是由亮度或我们考虑的其他一系列因素驱动的。至关重要的是,当心理努力完全投入到眼球运动控制中时(即在双重任务设置中减少),这种关系最强,这表明它不是由于一般的努力或唤醒。我们的发现表明,在场景观看过程中,目标驱动的控制需要心理努力,并且瞳孔大小可以用作在线测量指标来跟踪行为的目标驱动性。