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TEAM 7: Cognitive Science

TEAM 7: Cognitive Science. Nevil Abraham, Rachana Balasubramanian, Grace Chen, Saavan Chintalacheruvu, Rajeshwari Enjeti, Cynthia Guo, Bum Shik Kim, Kang Woo Kim, Emma Leeds, Jessica Mui, Ellen Wu, Rong Xiang. Background. Fixation Fixation Duration Saccade

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TEAM 7: Cognitive Science

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  1. TEAM 7: Cognitive Science Nevil Abraham, Rachana Balasubramanian, Grace Chen, Saavan Chintalacheruvu, Rajeshwari Enjeti, Cynthia Guo, Bum Shik Kim, Kang Woo Kim, Emma Leeds, Jessica Mui, Ellen Wu, Rong Xiang

  2. Background • Fixation • Fixation Duration • Saccade • Dynamic loop between visual input and cognition

  3. Table of Contents • Line spacing • PSA • Lying • Antisaccade

  4. The Effects of Line Spacing on Eye Movements and Comprehension Ellen Wu and Rong Xiang

  5. Introduction Hypothesis: Increasing line spacing results in increased fixation duration and thus, increased reading comprehension.

  6. Questions 40 s Break 15 s Experimental Design Read 40 s Break (15 seconds)

  7. Group 1 Experimental Design A1 B2 C1 Group 2 A2 B1 C2

  8. Results Comprehension Score (%) Fixation Duration (ms) Single Spaced Double Spaced Spacing

  9. Participant Data Comprehension Scores (%) Participants Fig. 2 The average comprehension scores across all subjects

  10. Discussion • Lack of correlation between line spacing, fixation duration, and comprehension levels • Future experiments • Practical application

  11. 2. PSA Text Placement Emma Leeds, Raje Enjeti, Rachana Balasubramanian, Jessica Mui

  12. PSAs: Public Service Announcements Hypothesis: Text placement at top would create longer fixations and thus higher comprehension than if text was at the bottom

  13. Methods

  14. Results

  15. Conclusion =

  16. Eye Movements when Lying Saavan Chintalacheruvu & Nevil Abraham

  17. Introduction • Common notion that eyes focus on top-left when lying • Some experimental evidence supporting this

  18. Materials & Methods

  19. Results: Average Fixation Duration • T:360 ± 370 milliseconds • L: 370 ± 4.0x10^2 milliseconds • p = 0.468

  20. Possible Errors/Improvement • Nature of the stimulus • Why do people lie? • People usually lie to people • not a good representation of lying • Improvement • Lie to an actual human being • Give participants a reason to lie

  21. Conclusion • No correlation within the experiment’s parameters • However: • data was highly variable • results are inconclusive • must be repeated with improvements

  22. The Antisaccade Task Under Changing Fixation Points Grace Chen, Cynthia Guo, Bum Shik Kim, Kang Woo Kim

  23. What is an antisaccade? • Inhibition of reflexive saccade • Frontal cortex ability Saccade Antisaccade

  24. 1. stationary vs. moving fixation point 2. moving in opposite vs. same direction as cue Hypotheses Antisaccade ability will vary with: vs vs

  25. Experimental Design Experimental moving fixation point cues appear in same/opposite direction Control static fixation point cues appear on L/R 30 trials 64 trials 15 left 15 right 32 same direction 32 opposite direction 16 left 16 right 16 left 16 right

  26. Analysis of Results

  27. General Conclusions • Eye patterns remain steady under varied conditions • Moving fixation point reduced antisaccade ability • Dynamic feedback between eyes and cognition • High variability between participants

  28. Acknowledgements Dr. Minjoon Kouh Frank Minio NJ Governor’s School of the Sciences Dr. Adam Cassano Dr. Steve Surace Anna Mae Dinio-Bloch Bayer Health Care • Independent College Fund of NJ/Johnson & Johnson • AT&T • Actavis Pharmaceuticals • Celgene • Novartis • Laura (NJGSS ’86) and John OverdeckNJGSS Alumnae and Parents of Alumnae • Board of Overseers, New Jersey Governor’s SchoolsState of New JerseyDrew University and all of NJGSS’s generous sponsors!

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