Saccadic eye movement metrics reflect surprise and mental model updating

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Abstract

Two experiments investigated what eye movements can reveal about how we process surprising information and how we update mental models in dynamic and unstructured environments. Participants made saccades to visual targets presented one at a time, radially, around an invisible perimeter. Target locations were normally distributed and shifted at an unannounced point during the task. Trials following the shift were considered surprising and unexpected. These unexpected and surprising events prompted the need to update. Slower saccadic latencies were observed for surprising/unexpected events, perhaps indicative of the need to reorient attention to the unexpected target location. Longer dwell times were observed for events that signaled a change in the distribution. These data show that eye movement metrics provide a reliable indicator of mental model updating when contingencies change even in the absence of explicit change signals.

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Go, H., Danckert, J., & Anderson, B. (2022). Saccadic eye movement metrics reflect surprise and mental model updating. Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 84(5), 1553–1565. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-022-02512-4

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