"Why do cuts work?" - Implicit memory biases attention and gaze after cuts in edited movies. (VSS 2015 Poster) Christian Valuch Raphael Seywerth Peter König Ulrich Ansorge 10.6084/m9.figshare.4479746.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/_Why_do_cuts_work_-_Implicit_memory_biases_attention_and_gaze_after_cuts_in_edited_movies_VSS_2015_Poster_/4479746 Poster presented at the Vision Sciences Society 15th Annual Meeting, St Pete Beach, FL, USA, 15.-20.-05.2015.<div><br></div><div>Abstract available in:</div><div>Valuch, C., Seywerth, R., König, P., & Ansorge, U. (2015). “Why do cuts work?” – Implicit memory biases attention and gaze after cuts in edited movies. <i>Journal of Vision, 15</i>(12), 1237.</div><div>Link: http://jov.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2434353</div> 2016-12-19 10:54:39 attention eye movements saccades fixations dynamic scenes memory priming editing continuity Vision Science Applied Psychology Psychological Methodology, Design and Analysis Cognitive Science not elsewhere classified Psychology and Cognitive Sciences not elsewhere classified