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Paintings and Sculptures: Where Do We Look First? - An Eye Tracking in Situ Study, of Children and Adults (1st ed. 2023)
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Discovery Miles 34 980
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Paintings and Sculptures: Where Do We Look First? - An Eye Tracking in Situ Study, of Children and Adults (1st ed. 2023)
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Total price: R3,508
Discovery Miles: 35 080
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The book presents three studies in which eye tracking data were
collected at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Rouen in June and July
2013. Overall, the results of those three studies highlight the
knowledge gained from the analysis of the very first saccade in a
museum context, when people look at paintings and statues. The
first study analyzes how viewers orient their first saccade on
paintings. This study shows that, in a museum, the first
saccade is attracted toward the center of paintings. This
attraction toward the paintings’ center is found in all the
subjects’ groups that we have studied. Noteworthily, this effect
is significantly less pronounced in individuals who never visit
museums. It is among amateurs, who often visit museums, that
the center attracts the most the first saccade. Among
experts, painters or art history teachers, and to a lesser extent
among amateurs, the pictorial composition largely determines the
orientation of the first saccade. We indeed found that, as soon as
the first saccade, experts orient their gaze toward the main
subject. This phenomenon seems to be explained by the fact that
experts immediately orient their gaze (here measured as the first
saccade) toward the paintings’ location conveying the most
meaning. It can either be the center, or a peripheral area,
depending on whether the paintings’ most meaningful subject is
located centrally or peripherally. The second study shows that the
center does not attract the first saccade in 5-year-old children.
This behavior appears later, in 8- to 10-year-old children.
However, noticeably, the 8–10-year-old children orient
significantly less frequently their first saccade toward the
paintings’ center as adults do, and this is also true when one
considers non-expert adult viewers. The results of the third study
focus on statues and reveal a very different oculomotor behavior:
Indeed, rather than looking at the center, statues’ viewers
exhibit a clear tendency to saccade first at the statues’
contours. This stands in contrast with the behavior that we observe
with paintings. Our study concludes that statues trigger a specific
oculomotor behavior. The latter appears to be mostly driven by the
physical presence that stone bodies incarnate. The movement and the
climax of this movement, that sculptors manage to convey, thus turn
out to attract the gaze in a unique fashion. The book concludes
that the first saccade is a powerful indicator of the oculomotor
behavior that greatly improves our comprehension of the unique
relationship between a viewer and artworks.
General
Imprint: |
Springer International Publishing AG
|
Country of origin: |
Switzerland |
Release date: |
May 2023 |
First published: |
2023 |
Authors: |
Magali Seille
• Zoi Kapoula
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Translators: |
Florence Campana
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Dimensions: |
235 x 155mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
136 |
Edition: |
1st ed. 2023 |
ISBN-13: |
978-3-03-131134-5 |
Categories: |
Books
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LSN: |
3-03-131134-5 |
Barcode: |
9783031311345 |
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