» Articles » PMID: 27299770

An In-depth Look at Saccadic Search in Infancy

Overview
Journal J Vis
Specialty Ophthalmology
Date 2016 Jun 15
PMID 27299770
Citations 14
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Two questions were posed in the present study: (1) Do infants search for discrepant items in the absence of instructions? We outline where previous research has been inconclusive in answering this question. (2) In what manner do infants search, and what are the fixation and saccade characteristics in saccadic search? A thorough characterization of saccadic search in infancy is of great importance as a reference for future eye-movement studies in infancy. We presented 10-month-old infants with 24 visual search displays in two separate sessions within two weeks. We report that infant saccadic search performance at 10 months is above what may be expected by our model of chance, and is dependent on the specific target. Infant fixation and saccade characteristics show similarities to adult fixation and saccade characteristics in saccadic search. All findings were highly consistent across two separate sessions on the group level. An examination of the reliability of saccadic search revealed that test-retest reliability for oculomotor characteristics was high, particularly for fixation duration. We suggest that future research into saccadic search in infancy adopt the presented model of chance as a baseline against which to compare search performance. Researchers investigating both the typical and atypical development of visual search may benefit from the presented results.

Citing Articles

Eye tracker calibration: How well can humans refixate a target?.

Hooge I, Hessels R, Niehorster D, Andersson R, Skrok M, Konklewski R Behav Res Methods. 2024; 57(1):23.

PMID: 39702537 PMC: 11659352. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02564-4.


The fundamentals of eye tracking part 1: The link between theory and research question.

Hessels R, Nuthmann A, Nystrom M, Andersson R, Niehorster D, Hooge I Behav Res Methods. 2024; 57(1):16.

PMID: 39668288 PMC: 11638287. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02544-8.


Strategies for enhancing automatic fixation detection in head-mounted eye tracking.

Drews M, Dierkes K Behav Res Methods. 2024; 56(6):6276-6298.

PMID: 38594440 PMC: 11541274. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02360-0.


Large eye-head gaze shifts measured with a wearable eye tracker and an industrial camera.

Hooge I, Niehorster D, Nystrom M, Hessels R Behav Res Methods. 2024; 56(6):5820-5833.

PMID: 38200239 PMC: 11335818. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-023-02316-w.


Eye tracking: empirical foundations for a minimal reporting guideline.

Holmqvist K, Orbom S, Hooge I, Niehorster D, Alexander R, Andersson R Behav Res Methods. 2022; 55(1):364-416.

PMID: 35384605 PMC: 9535040. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-021-01762-8.