At art school, we were taught that in movies and paintings, a person's gaze tends to enter in the upper right, and loop around in a C shape, exiting the frame on the lower right. Therefore, it's the job of the artist to compose the image to sweep the viewer back up on the right side, to repeat the cycle.<p>We didn't do eye tracking studies to confirm this, but in analyzing intuitively "good" images vs. "bad" ones, the good ones invariably catered to this kind of eye movement.<p>Websites control the eye so differently (and more rigidly) than how representational images do, that I wouldn't expect the two to generate similar viewer interactions.