| Literature DB >> 26565380 |
Tao He1,2, Yun Ding1,2, Zhiguo Wang1,2.
Abstract
Inhibition of return (IOR), typically explored in cueing paradigms, is a performance cost associated with previously attended locations and has been suggested as a crucial attentional mechanism that biases orientation towards novelty. In their seminal IOR paper, Posner and Cohen (1984) showed that IOR is coded in spatiotopic or environment-centered coordinates. Recent studies, however, have consistently reported IOR effects in both spatiotopic and retinotopic (eye-centered) coordinates. One overlooked methodological confound of all previous studies is that the spatial gradient of IOR is not considered when selecting the baseline for estimating IOR effects. This methodological issue makes it difficult to tell if the IOR effects reported in previous studies were coded in retinotopic or spatiotopic coordinates, or in both. The present study addresses this issue with the incorporation of no-cue trials to a modified cueing paradigm in which the cue and target are always intervened by a gaze-shift. The results revealed that a) IOR is indeed coded in both spatiotopic and retinotopic coordinates, and b) the methodology of previous work may have underestimated spatiotopic and retinotopic IOR effects.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26565380 PMCID: PMC4643241 DOI: 10.1038/srep16586
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The cueing task used to reveal spatiotopic and retinotopic IORs.
(a) An illustration of the task used in previous studies. Following an onset cue, the participants make an eye movement in response to the displacement of the fixation cross. This eye movement is necessary for dissociating the spatiotopic and retinotopic coordinates. After the eyes have arrived at the new fixation, a target that requires speeded response is presented at the cued spatial location (S-cued), a location that corresponds to the cued retinal locus (R-cued), or one of two mirror locations (S-mirror and R-mirror). (b–d) The IOR gradient makes the results of previous studies difficult to explain. While recent studies argued that IOR is coded in both spatiotopic and retinotopic coordinates (b), these results can also be observed if IOR is coded in spatiotopic (c) or retinotopic (d) coordinates only.
Mean target SRTs (ms) of all conditions in Experiments 1 and 2.
| FTOA | S-cued | S-mirror | Cued - mirror | R-cued | R-mirror | Cued - mirror | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 38 ms (Exp. 1) | With-cue | 270 (39.7) | 238 (35.3) | 32 (17.7)*** | 245 (45.1) | 224 (61.5) | 21 (31.9)* |
| No-cue | 216 (36.5) | 213 (36.9) | – | 201 (43.1) | 207 (39.9) | – | |
| 54 (32.7)*** | 25 (29.4)* | – | 44 (29.2)*** | 17 (33.6)* | – | ||
| 1424 ms (Exp. 2) | With-cue | 201 (16.7) | 193 (12.8) | 8 (11.6)** | 203 (15.7) | 192 (16.6) | 11 (15.2)* |
| No-cue | 190 (15.5) | 187 (17.9) | – | 187 (14.6) | 186 (22.8) | – | |
| 11 (12.1)* | 6 (12.7) | – | 16 (13.3)** | 6 (15.4) | – |
IOR effects were estimated with the SRT difference between cued and mirror locations (as in previous work), or the SRT difference between with- and no-cue trials (pure IOR). Numbers in the parentheses are standard errors (SDs).
Note: *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
Figure 2Task procedure and all possible trial types.
(a) Task procedure. Note that the onset cue was presented on half of the trials, see text for details. (b) The presence of the onset cue and the position of the target relative to the cue yielded a total of 8 possible trial types. This figure is for illustration purpose only; the direction of the fixation displacement was randomly chosen for each trial.