| Literature DB >> 23092946 |
A Caglar Tas1, Cathleen M Moore, Andrew Hollingworth.
Abstract
Recent evidence has suggested that relatively precise information about the location and visual form of a saccade target object is retained across a saccade. However, this information appears to be available for report only when the target is removed briefly, so that the display is blank when the eyes land. We hypothesized that the availability of precise target information is dependent on whether a post-saccade object is mapped to the same object representation established for the presaccade target. If so, then the post-saccade features of the target overwrite the presaccade features, a process of object mediated updating in which visual masking is governed by object continuity. In two experiments, participants' sensitivity to the spatial displacement of a saccade target was improved when that object changed surface feature properties across the saccade, consistent with the prediction of the object-mediating updating account. Transsaccadic perception appears to depend on a mechanism of object-based masking that is observed across multiple domains of vision. In addition, the results demonstrate that surface-feature continuity contributes to visual stability across saccades.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23092946 PMCID: PMC3720035 DOI: 10.1167/12.11.18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis ISSN: 1534-7362 Impact factor: 2.240