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Anke Cajar

Researcher at University of Potsdam

Publications -  9
Citations -  138

Anke Cajar is an academic researcher from University of Potsdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fixation (visual) & Saccade. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 111 citations.

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Control of fixation duration during scene viewing by interaction of foveal and peripheral processing.

TL;DR: A computational model with two compartments is implemented, approximating spatial aspects of processing by foveal and peripheral activations that change according to a small set of dynamical rules, which reproduced distributions of fixation durations from all experimental conditions by variation of few parameters that were affected by specific filtering conditions.
Journal Article

Control of fixation duration during scene viewing by interaction of foveal and peripheral processing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the consequences of functional segregation for the control of fixation durations during scene viewing using gaze-contingent displays, using high-pass or low-pass filters to either the central or the peripheral visual field and compared eye-movement patterns with an unfiltered control condition.
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Spatial frequency processing in the central and peripheral visual field during scene viewing.

TL;DR: Interactions of perception and gaze control are highly sensitive to experimental manipulations of input images as long as the residual information can still be accessed for gaze control.
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Coupling of attention and saccades when viewing scenes with central and peripheral degradation.

TL;DR: The experimental results indicate that task-induced modulations of saccade amplitudes reflect attentional modulations, compatible with the interpretation that saccase amplitudes and direction are computed in partial independence.
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How spatial frequencies and color drive object search in real-world scenes: A new eye-movement corpus

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how spatial frequencies and color affect object search in real-world scenes and concluded that peripheral vision is critical for object localization and central vision is crucial for object identification, whereas high-frequency information, relatively independent of color, is most important for object detection in central vision.