@inproceedings{Santella:2004:VIN,
optorganization = {},
author = {Anthony Santella and Doug DeCarlo},
optkey = {},
optseries = {},
editor = {Aaron Hertzmann and Craig Kaplan},
localfile = {papers/Santella.2004.VIN.pdf},
address = {New York},
publisher = {ACM Press},
optmonth = {},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/987657.987669},
opturl = {},
optwww = {},
optcrossref = {},
booktitle = NPAR2004,
optstatus = {},
optvolume = {},
optnumber = {},
title = {{V}isual {I}nterest and {NPR}: an {E}valuation and {M}anifesto},
abstract = {Using eye tracking, we study the way viewers look at photos and
image based NPR illustrations. Viewers examine the same number of
locations in photos and in NPR images with uniformly high or low
detail. In contrast, viewers are attracted to areas where detail
is locally preserved in meaningfully abstracted images. This
accords with the idea that artists carefully manipulate detail to
control interest and understanding. It also validates the method
of meaningful abstraction used in DeCarlo and Santella [2002].
Results also suggest eye tracking can be a useful tool for
evaluation of NPR systems.},
year = {2004},
pages = {71--78},
}
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