Vision research

What People Notice Most in a Scene: Human Judgments of Visual Importance

Updated

Abstract

In a study with 70 observers, maximum saliency inside selected objects was significantly higher than that of non-selected objects and backgrounds.

  • Observers identified standout objects based on low-level features in images containing two objects each.
  • The inclusion of object size improved the prediction of which object was chosen as most salient.
  • In a separate experiment, observers drew polygons around the most salient objects in cluttered scenes.
  • A map based on these annotations explained the eye fixations of another group of 20 observers significantly above chance.
  • Classic bottom-up saliency models were found to explain both observers' judgments and eye fixations.
  • Computational models designed for predicting fixations slightly outperformed those aimed at detecting salient objects.

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