The temporal evolution of the central fixation bias in scene viewing
Lars Oliver Martin Rothkegel, Hans Arne Trukenbrod, Heiko Herbert, Sch\"utt, Felix Alexander Wichmann, Ralf Engbert

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that delaying the initial saccade after image onset reduces the central fixation bias in scene viewing, highlighting the importance of initial saccade timing in eye movement analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a method to diminish the central fixation bias by delaying the first saccade and analyzes the underlying mechanisms through model comparisons.
Findings
Delayed saccades significantly reduce central fixation bias.
First saccade latency influences initial fixation location.
Default activation decreases over time after image onset.
Abstract
When watching the image of a natural scene on a computer screen, observers initially move their eyes towards the center of the image --- a reliable experimental finding termed central fixation bias. This systematic tendency in eye guidance likely masks attentional selection driven by image properties and top-down cognitive processes. Here we show that the central fixation bias can be reduced by delaying the initial saccade relative to image onset. In four scene-viewing experiments we manipulated observers' initial gaze position and delayed their first saccade by a specific time interval relative to the onset of an image. We analyzed the distance to image center over time and show that the central fixation bias of initial fixations was significantly reduced after delayed saccade onsets. We additionally show that selection of the initial saccade target strongly depended on the first…
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