Thank you @Mark_Bailey and @statman .
The practical significance question is challenging for me to answer right now because I am still learning how to understand the data. I don’k know yet what could be a correct parameter of visual behavior change of experts looking at images of such kind. I will check, that is a good point.
In this research I am using eye tracking data of experts and non-experts looking at 27 different paintings from the same artist. I know they are fixating the paintings because I used a mapping procedure that filters visual behavior mapped onto snapshots of the paintings. The objects are similar in the way they represent portraits of people with an abstract background, but they are still 27 different paintings of different sizes, each of them with its own singularity. Fixation time was free: people had the time they wanted to look at the images, so each participant looked at the images for a different amount of time. The expertise was determined by checking people's profile: if they were professionals of non-art analysis related areas, they were considered non-experts; and if they were professionals of art analysis areas, they were considered experts. I understand this can create a bias as this is a subjective parameter.
My first thought was if expertise could affect the way people look at the images. One way of checking that was comparing where experts and non-experts looked at, verifying fixations on different Areas of Interest. For this analysis I used some basic distribution histograms (I did not put this data here). Then I was thinking of the two other eye tracking data I have: fixation duration and fixation count. I was assuming that the overall time people fixate the paintings and the amount of total fixations could be influenced somehow by expertise (for example: the more they look, the more they tend to get information from the images; the less they look, the easier is for them to inspect the images; the more fixations, the more detailed the visual inspection, etc). I was checking that on an exploratory basis.
Where people look at can be influenced by a lot of things, you are absolutely right @statman, but I was trying to check if expertise played a role on the overall visual behavior anyway.
Your both analysis are great, thank you once again! I just don’t know yet how to extract the outliers from this analysis.