Altmann, G. T. M. & Kamide, Y. (2007). The real-time mediation of visual attention by language and world knowledge: Linking anticipatory (and other) eye movements to linguistic processing. Journal of Memory and Language, 57(4), 502-518.
Two experiments explored the representational basis for anticipatory eye movements.
Participants heard "the man will drink ..." or "the man has drunk
..." (Experiment 1) or "the man will drink all of ..." or "the
man has drunk all of ..." (Experiment 2). They viewed a concurrent scene
depicting a full glass of beer and an empty wine glass (amongst other things).
There were more saccades towards the empty wine glass in the past tensed conditions
than in the future tense conditions; the converse pattern obtained for looks
towards the full glass of beer. We argue that these anticipatory eye movements
reflect sensitivity to objects' affordances, and develop an account of the linkage
between language processing and visual attention that can account not only for
looks towards named objects, but also for those cases (including anticipatory
eye movements) where attention is directed towards objects that are not being
named.