---
res:
  bibo_abstract:
  - '<p>The study investigates two different ways of guiding the addressee of an explanation
    - an explainee, through action demonstration: contrastive and non-contrastive.
    Their effect was tested on attention to specific action elements (goal) as well
    as on event memory. In an eye-tracking experiment, participants were shown different
    motion videos that were either contrastive or non-contrastive with respect to
    the segments of movement presentation. Given that everyday action demonstration
    is often multimodal, the stimuli were created with re- spect to their visual and
    verbal presentation. For visual presentation, a video combined two movements in
    a contrastive (e.g., Up-motion following a Down-motion) or non-contrastive way
    (e.g., two Up-motions following each other). For verbal presentation, each video
    was combined with a sequence of instruction descriptions in the form of negative
    (i.e., contrastive) or assertive (i.e., non-contrastive) guidance. It was found
    that a) attention to the event goal increased for this condition in the later
    time window, and b) participants’ recall of the event was facilitated when a visually
    contrastive motion was combined with a verbal contrast.</p>@eng'
  bibo_authorlist:
  - foaf_Person:
      foaf_givenName: Amit
      foaf_name: Singh, Amit
      foaf_surname: Singh
      foaf_workInfoHomepage: http://www.librecat.org/personId=91018
    orcid: 0000-0002-7789-1521
  - foaf_Person:
      foaf_givenName: Katharina J.
      foaf_name: Rohlfing, Katharina J.
      foaf_surname: Rohlfing
      foaf_workInfoHomepage: http://www.librecat.org/personId=50352
  dct_date: 2023^xs_gYear
  dct_language: eng
  dct_publisher: Cognitive Science Society@
  dct_subject:
  - Attention
  - negation
  - contrastive  guidance
  - eye-movements
  - action understanding
  - event representation
  dct_title: 'Contrastiveness in the context of action demonstration: an eye-tracking
    study on its effects on action perception and action recall@'
...
