Art expertise reduces influence of visual salience on fixation in viewing abstract-paintings

When viewing a painting, artists perceive more information from the painting on the basis of their experience and knowledge than art novices do. This difference can be reflected in eye scan paths during viewing of paintings. Distributions of scan paths of artists are different from those of novices...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-02, Vol.10 (2), p.e0117696-e0117696
Hauptverfasser: Koide, Naoko, Kubo, Takatomi, Nishida, Satoshi, Shibata, Tomohiro, Ikeda, Kazushi
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Kubo, Takatomi
Nishida, Satoshi
Shibata, Tomohiro
Ikeda, Kazushi
description When viewing a painting, artists perceive more information from the painting on the basis of their experience and knowledge than art novices do. This difference can be reflected in eye scan paths during viewing of paintings. Distributions of scan paths of artists are different from those of novices even when the paintings contain no figurative object (i.e. abstract paintings). There are two possible explanations for this difference of scan paths. One is that artists have high sensitivity to high-level features such as textures and composition of colors and therefore their fixations are more driven by such features compared with novices. The other is that fixations of artists are more attracted by salient features than those of novices and the fixations are driven by low-level features. To test these, we measured eye fixations of artists and novices during the free viewing of various abstract paintings and compared the distribution of their fixations for each painting with a topological attentional map that quantifies the conspicuity of low-level features in the painting (i.e. saliency map). We found that the fixation distribution of artists was more distinguishable from the saliency map than that of novices. This difference indicates that fixations of artists are less driven by low-level features than those of novices. Our result suggests that artists may extract visual information from paintings based on high-level features. This ability of artists may be associated with artists' deep aesthetic appreciation of paintings.
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subjects Aesthetics
Aptitude
Artists
Attention - physiology
Comparative analysis
Conspicuity
Esthetics
Experimental psychology
Explicit knowledge
Eye movements
Feature extraction
Female
Fixation
Fixation, Ocular - physiology
Humans
Information processing
Information science
Level (quantity)
Male
Neural networks
Neurosciences
Psychology
Salience
Science
Semantics
Viewing
Visual perception
Visual task performance
Young Adult
title Art expertise reduces influence of visual salience on fixation in viewing abstract-paintings
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