Effect of Prior Haptic Object Exploration on Eye Movements.
Authors: Toscani, M., Gather, M., Seiss, E., Metzger, A.
Journal: Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)
Publication Date: 12/01/2026
Pages: 17470218261417305
eISSN: 1747-0226
DOI: 10.1177/17470218261417305
Abstract:Interaction with objects typically involves both vision and touch. Understanding how visual and haptic information interact during object exploration is essential to uncovering the mechanisms of multisensory shape perception. We investigated whether haptic exploration influences subsequent eye movements, using a cross-modal shape comparison task. Participants (Nā=ā22) explored 3D replicas of bell peppers either haptically or visually, and subsequently viewed the same or a different object. We tracked eye movements during visual explorations. Comparing uni-modal visual to cross-modal, haptic-to-visual conditions, we found that prior haptic exploration led to significantly shorter fixations, longer and faster saccades, as well as larger coverage of the image with fixations during subsequent visual exploration - indicative of a broader, more distributed scanning pattern. These effects suggest that visual saliency is modulated by prior tactile experience, challenging purely unimodal or bottom-up models of attentional guidance.
Source: PubMed
Effect of Prior Haptic Object Exploration on Eye Movements.
Authors: Toscani, M., Gather, M., Seiss, E., Metzger, A.
Journal: Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006)
Publication Date: 01/2026
Pages: 17470218261417305
eISSN: 1747-0226
ISSN: 1747-0218
DOI: 10.1177/17470218261417305
Abstract:Interaction with objects typically involves both vision and touch. Understanding how visual and haptic information interact during object exploration is essential to uncovering the mechanisms of multisensory shape perception. We investigated whether haptic exploration influences subsequent eye movements, using a cross-modal shape comparison task. Participants (Nā=ā22) explored 3D replicas of bell peppers either haptically or visually, and subsequently viewed the same or a different object. We tracked eye movements during visual explorations. Comparing uni-modal visual to cross-modal, haptic-to-visual conditions, we found that prior haptic exploration led to significantly shorter fixations, longer and faster saccades, as well as larger coverage of the image with fixations during subsequent visual exploration - indicative of a broader, more distributed scanning pattern. These effects suggest that visual saliency is modulated by prior tactile experience, challenging purely unimodal or bottom-up models of attentional guidance.
Source: Europe PubMed Central