Only first authors are listed for each presentation.
09:00 |
Keynote
The
moving tablet of the eye
N. Wade (Dundee)
Chair: Géry d'Ydewalle |
Auditorium
|
Balbeggie Room
|
Low-level physiology I
Chair: John Findlay |
Look ahead
Chair: Ralph Radach |
10:00 |
Sequence
learning in ocular smooth pursuit allows prediction of complex
motion
G.R. Barnes |
10:00 |
Eye-voice
lag when reading aloud and singing prima vista
P. Berseus |
10:20 |
The
effect of muscle pulleys on the dynamics of congenital nystagmus
L.J. Bour |
10:20 |
The
organization of large saccades made with eyes, head and body
M. Land |
10:40 |
Vestibulo-ocular
eye torsion elicited by lateral body swing modify motion velocity
perception of circular vection
K. Koga |
10:40 |
Head
and hand correlation in real and virtual model construction
tasks
M. Hayhoe |
11:00 |
The
influence of retinal position error and target velocity on saccades
in monkey
T. Eggert |
11:00 |
Is
it important to look ahead of the action when performing a natural
task?
N. Mennie |
11:30 |
Morning Coffee
|
Eye-movement control in reading I
Chair: Alan Kennedy |
Attention
Chair: Martin Fischer |
11:45 |
Visuo-motor influences on eye movements in reading: how word
position on line affects landing positions in words
F. Vitu |
11:45 |
Saccadic Search: Direct or indirect control of fixation duration?
I.Th.C. Hooge |
12:05 |
Eye guidance and the saliency of word beginnings of long and
short words in reading text
W. Vonk |
12:05 |
Static smooth pursuit: Effect of visual distractors and coupling
with visual attention
S. Garbade |
12:25 |
Orthographic regularity influences where words are first fixated
independent of prior processing difficulty
S. White |
12:25 |
Change blindness in static versus dynamic starfields
J. Helmert |
12:45 |
Initial fixation position in words affects fixation durations
in reading
J. Hyönä |
12:45 |
Time course of the spatial coupling between selection-for-action
and selection-for-perception
C. Beauvillain |
13:15 |
Lunch
|
Clinical studies
Chair: Reinhold Kliegl |
Brain mapping of oculomotor cortex
Organiser and chair: Bob Rafal and John Findlay |
14:30 |
Scanning deficits and misperception in schizophrenia
O.M. de Wilde |
14:30 |
Neural correlates for preparatory set associated with pro-saccades
and anti-saccades in humans investigated with event-related
fMRI
S. Everling |
14:50 |
Impaired executive control of eye movements in patients with
schizophrenia and frontal lobe lesions
N. Kathman |
14:50 |
The role of the human supplementary eye field
M. Husain |
15:10 |
Visual scanpath dysfunction in first-degree relatives of schizophrenia
probands: evidence for a vulnerability marker?
C.M. Loughland |
15:10 |
Development of the electrocortical correlates of preparatory
attention during pre-warned saccadic responses
C. Klein |
15:30 |
Eye movement deficits during the first year following mild
closed head injury
M.H. Heitger |
15:30 |
Investigating human oculomotor cortex with structural and
functional MRI guided 1 Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic
stimulation
R. Rafal |
16:00 |
Afternoon Tea
|
Symposium
Language comprehension and reading
Chair: Roger van Gompel |
Symposium
Medical imaging
Chair: Guang-Zhong Yang |
16:15 |
On using eyetracking data to evaluate theories of on-line
sentence processing: The case of reduced relative clauses
C. Clifton |
16:15 |
The effect of medical image characteristics on accuracy and
eye movements during a transcription task
J.W. Hatton |
|
Disfluencies affect early parsing decisions
F. Ferreira |
|
Saccadic eye movements during laparoscopic surgery: a preliminary
investigation
A. James |
|
When anaphor resolution is easier with atypical antecedents
than typical antecedents: Eye-movements and the processing of
noun phrase anaphora
J. Pearson |
|
Using eye-position to understand medical image perception
E.A. Krupinski |
|
Eye movements and sentence interpretation
M. Pickering |
|
Visual search in parallel environments - eye-hand coordination
in minimal access surgery
J. Tchalenko |
|
The effect of plausibility on eye fixations in reading
K. Rayner |
|
|
17:55 |
Keynote
Linking
basic oculomotor research and models of eye movement control
in reading
R. Radach (Aachen)
Chair: Alan Kennedy |
19:00 |
Dinner
|
|
|
09:00 |
Keynote
Eye
movements and visual memory for natural scenes
J. Henderson (Michigan State)
Chair: Robin Hill |
Auditorium
|
Balbeggie Room
|
Library
|
Eye tracking studies of speech processing
Organiser and chair: Antje Meyer |
Methodology
Chair: Wayne Murray |
Planning and inhibition
Chair: |
10:00 |
Embodying the mapping between language and the visual world:
dissociations between the visual world and its mental representation
G.T.M. Altmann |
10:00 |
Is it stereoscopic viewing or monoscopic viewing when subjects
see through the eye camera?
Y. Kitamura |
10:00 |
Specific co-ordinate systems for the planning of intra- and
inter-object saccades
D. Vergilino-Perez |
|
Eyeing the clock
K. Bock |
10:20 |
Analysis of the dynamics of eye movements in perceptually
meaningful feature spaces
L. Dempere-Marco |
10:20 |
Saccade inhibition using visual and tactile stop signals
A. Åkerfelt |
|
Investigating individual differences in childrens real-time
sentence comprehension using language-mediated eye movements
K. Nation |
10:40 |
Feature based visual search analysis in medical image understanding
X.-P. Hu |
10:40 |
The inhibitory effect of a previous distracter on saccadic
eye movements
T.J. Crawford |
|
Activation of competitor words in different prosodic contexts
A.P. Salverda |
11:00 |
Using motion to guide the focus of gaze during eye typing
P. Majaranta |
11:00 |
The effect of distractors on oculomotor programming is modulated
by prior inhibition
R. Godijn |
|
Stability of speech-to-gaze alignment in multiple object naming:
Beautiful or boring?
F. van der Meulen |
|
|
|
|
11:30 |
Morning Coffee
|
Applied
Chair: Alastair Gale |
High-level language
Chair: Charles Clifton |
|
11:45 |
Individual and group-level differences revealed by new methods
for objective analysis of visual scanpath behaviour
P.J. Benson |
11:45 |
Looking and lying: Speakers' gazes reflect locus of attention
rather than speech content
Z.M. Griffin |
|
|
12:05 |
Eye tracking: A tool for the Discount Usability Toolbox
E.P. Rozanski |
12:05 |
Eye-movements on images as a measure of disambiguation and
reinterpretation in online sentence comprehension: a cross-linguistic
comparison
P. Knöferle
|
|
|
12:25 |
Oculomotor behaviour and cognitive task difficulty
T. Boersema |
12:25 |
Perspective alignment in referential communication
L. Sichelschmidt |
|
|
12:45 |
Page layout influence on eye movements during proof-reading
tasks on computer screen
C. Robino |
12:45 |
The immediate behavioural consequences of the display of colour
and category competitors during speech processing
F. Huettig |
|
|
13:15 |
Lunch
|
Symposium
Models of eye-movement control during reading
Chair: Erik Reichle |
Symposium
Historical studies of eye movements
Chair: Nick Wade |
|
|
14:30 |
Spatially distributed processing in reading: The SWIFT model
R. Engbert |
14:30 |
The questing eye: the legacy of Alfred Yarbus
M.F. Land |
|
|
|
Modeling eye movements in reading: Serial vs. parallel processing
of words
E.D. Reichle |
|
Eye Movement Research in the 1950s
G. Westheimer |
|
|
|
Reading test without spaces: The case of Thai script
R.G. Reilly |
|
Dodge and the development of photographic eye tracking
B.W. Tatler |
|
|
|
Oculomotor-based control of eye movements in reading
S. Yang |
|
Eye movements and motion illusions
N.J. Wade |
|
|
16:00 |
Afternoon Tea
|
16:15 |
|
17:45 |
Keynote
Chronic
lesions of human oculomotor cortex: Effects on voluntary and
reflexive eye movements
R. Rafal (Bangor)
Chair: John Findlay |
19:30
(20:00) |
Conference Dinner
|
09:00 |
Keynote
Neural
selection and control of saccades by frontal eye field
J. Schall (Vanderbilt)
Chair: Heiner Deubel |
Auditorium
|
Balbeggie Room
|
Eye-movement control in reading II
Chair: Cécile Beauvillain |
Eye movements, virtual reality and dynamic
scene perception
Organiser and chair: Peter De Graef |
10:00 |
Toward a model of eye movement development in reading
G. Feng |
10:00 |
Eye movements in VR: Applications, concerns, and pitfalls
A.T. Duchowski |
10:20 |
A longitudinal developmental study of saccade control
C. Klein |
|
iTrack: Integrated eye, head and finger tracking in virtual
environments
C. Christou |
10:40 |
Parametric control of eye movements: How readers regulate
their reading speed
S. Yang |
|
System level eye movement models
D. Ballard |
11:00 |
The effect of an extra blank space on eye movement control
in reading
D. Drieghe |
|
The effects of image and visual resolution on saccade targeting
in natural scenes
L. Loschky |
|
|
|
Transsaccadic perception of moving objects
K. Verfaillie |
11:30 |
Morning Coffee
|
Symposium
Spatial transformations and spatial constancy across saccades
Chair: Heiner Deubel |
Lexical processing
Chair: Jukka Hyönä |
11:45 |
More to transsaccadic memory than VSTM: Blanking reveals a
pre-attentive visual analog
F. Germeys |
11:45 |
Transposed-letter effects in reading
R.L. Johnson |
12:05 |
How postsaccadic landmarks determine the perceived displacement
of visual stimuli across saccades
H. Deubel |
12:05 |
Meaning dominance and word frequency in ambiguity resolution
R. Morris |
12:25 |
Impaired representation of saccadic eye displacement after
posterior parietal lesions: Is it a craniotopic or a directional
deficit?
W. Heide |
12:25 |
Segmentation cues in compound processing
R. Bertram |
12:45 |
Effects of foveal and peripheral visual information on pointing
movements
A. Sprenger |
12:45 |
English compound words: An exploration into the function of
interword spaces
B.J. Juhasz |
13:15 |
Lunch
|
14:00/
14:30 |
Afternoon Excursion
|
19:30 |
Dinner
|
|
|
09:00 |
Keynote
Tracking
lexical access in continuous speech
M. Tanenhaus (Rochester)
Chair: Antje Meyer |
Auditorium
|
Balbeggie Room
|
Transsaccadic memory
Chair: Ralph Radach |
Eye-movement control
Chair: Keith Rayner |
10:00 |
The role of memory in visual search: Evidence from eye movements
E.M. Reingold |
10:00 |
Evaluating the split-fovea model against eye movement behaviour
during reading
R. Shillcock |
10:20 |
Trans-saccadic temporal integration of visual motion
D. Melcher |
10:20 |
Can the preplanning of refixations explain the preferred viewing
location?
S. McDonald |
10:40 |
The modulation of transsaccadic object memory by real-world
scene semantics
P. De Graef |
10:40 |
Microsaccades in reading fixations
R. Kliegl |
11:00 |
Representations of natural scenes: fixation and the accumulation
of abstract visual information
B. Tatler |
11:00 |
On the metrics of refixation saccades in normal reading
L. Huestegge |
11:20 |
The intermodal distractor effect: Parallel habitution in fixation
duration and in ERPs
S. Pannasch |
11:20 |
Reading disappearing text
S.P. Liversedge |
11:45 |
Morning Coffee
|
From competing distractors to language
Chair: Manolo Perea |
Perceptual tasks
Chair: Wayne Murray |
12:00 |
Curved saccade trajectories: do symmetrical distractors balance
the scales?
R. Walker |
12:00 |
Eye-movement patterns reflect perceptual biases apparent in
chimeric face processing
S. Butler |
12:20 |
Curved trajectory effects in voluntary and reflexive saccades:
spatial extent of distractor interference
E. McSorley |
12:20 |
Staring into Space: Evaluating mechanical motion, mental animation
and eye movements
S. Kriz |
12:40 |
Gaze behavior in audiovisual speech perception
M. Paré |
12:40 |
Bend it like Beckham - Mindsets and visual attention in decision-making
in soccer
O. Höner |
13:00 |
Thematic vs. syntactic expectations in reading: Evidence from
eye-movements in German
C. Scheepers |
13:00 |
Traffic accidents authors and speeders characterized by saccadic
reaction times
A. Tarnowski |
13:20 |
End of Formal Programme Followed by Lunch
|