Spontaneouslooking
Spontaneouslooking is a term used in cognitive science to describe involuntary, unprompted eye gaze toward elements in the visual scene without explicit task demands or external cues. It denotes gaze driven by intrinsic attention or curiosity rather than a conscious goal, and is often studied in free-viewing contexts.
Researchers measure spontaneouslooking with eye-tracking while participants view images, videos, or social scenes. Indicators include gaze
Determinants of spontaneouslooking include low-level salience (color, brightness), high-level factors (emotional content, social relevance), novelty, and
Applications span infant research, autism studies, aging, and human–computer interaction, where unprompted gaze provides insight into
Spontaneouslooking is one of several terms for unprompted gaze behavior; related concepts include free-viewing gaze and