Publication:
PERSON REPETITION NEGLECT WHILE VIEWING CONTINUOUS PICTORIAL NARRATIVES

dc.bibliographiccitation.firstpage233
dc.bibliographiccitation.issue2
dc.bibliographiccitation.journalEmpirical Studies of the Arts
dc.bibliographiccitation.lastpage251
dc.bibliographiccitation.volume30
dc.contributor.authorKalkofen, Hermann
dc.contributor.authorStrack, Micha
dc.date.accessioned2018-11-07T09:14:42Z
dc.date.available2018-11-07T09:14:42Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.description.abstractContinuous pictorial narratives (CPN) present protagonists repeatedly, yet adult viewers report seeing different persons instead. We presented 12 CPNs to 16 adults, whose oculomotor and verbal responses were continuously recorded. We addressed (a) the capability of instructions to compensate for lacking aesthetic fluency (Smith & Smith, 2006); (b) perceptual-cognitive processes accompanying Person Repetition Detection (PRD); (c) formal stimulus properties related with PRD. The results demonstrated that (a) search for presented persons especially similar to each other yielded more PRD than estimation of average age or aesthetic evaluation; (b) saccades between picture regions with repeated persons and PRDs were positively correlated; and (c) formal properties and PRD are not reliably correlated.
dc.identifier.doi10.2190/EM.30.2.h
dc.identifier.isi000312281500008
dc.identifier.urihttps://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gro-2/27481
dc.notes.statuszu prüfen
dc.notes.submitterNajko
dc.publisherBaywood Publ Co Inc
dc.relation.issn0276-2374
dc.titlePERSON REPETITION NEGLECT WHILE VIEWING CONTINUOUS PICTORIAL NARRATIVES
dc.typejournal_article
dc.type.internalPublicationyes
dc.type.peerReviewedyes
dc.type.statuspublished
dspace.entity.typePublication

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