Regulation of eye movements and pupil size in natural scenes
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The visual diet of humans is complex in space, time, spectrum, and consequently the activation of the retinal photoreceptors. While analyses of natural scenes have yielded valuable insights, the naturalistic natural stimulus on the retina is not very well understood. In the present study, we performed eye tracking in naturalistic indoor and outdoor real-world scenes. We recorded pupil size, several saccade and fixation metrics, as well as subjective scene perception ratings derived from subjective questionnaires. For the first five seconds of eye tracking, the descriptive data analysis revealed significantly increased average saccade frequency (p =.0025), amplitude (p =.0049), peak velocity (p =.0072), as well as pupil size (p = 1.307e-09) in the indoor environments. After this initial phase, these differences vanished, except for pupil size. Using an exploratory analysis on the whole 4-minute measurement, we found that saccade and fixation metrics, along with scene ratings, showed significantly different correlations between indoor and outdoor conditions. Despite the inherent constraints of such a naturalistic study (reduced ability to exert control over the precise task and the environmental conditions), we contend that the dataset holds substantial value for the field of eye movement research, as it has effectively minimized confounding factors that have been prevalent in previous eye tracking studies.