Figure 8. Larger D values were associated with more gaze shifts from D to HV and more accurate decisions.
(a) A multivariate regression analysis showed that larger D values were associated with attentional capture effects as indexed by more fixations at D (right, purple bar). In addition, larger HV-LV difference was associated with fewer fixations at LV (left, blue bar) and larger total HV+LV values were associated with fewer fixations in general (middle). (b) As D value increased so did gaze shifts between D and HV (right, green bar), while gaze shifts between D and LV decreased (right, blue bar). These effects could not merely be due to more fixations at HV or LV per se because the effects of fixations at HV, LV and D on the gaze shifts were partialled out before testing the relationships between D value and gaze shifts. (c) The effect was directionally specific; larger D values were associated with more D-to-HV shifts and fewer D-to-LV shifts but not the opposite (right, green and blue bars; HV-to-D or LV-to-D shifts). (d) In turn, more D-to-HV shifts and fewer D-to-LV shifts predicted greater decision accuracy. FixHV fixation at HV; FixLV fixation at LV; FixD fixation at D; ShiftHV-LV gaze shift between HV and LV; ShiftHV-D gaze shift between HV and D; ShiftLV-D gaze shift between LV and D. # p<0.1, *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001. Error bars indicate standard error.