Literature DB >> 27385794

Oculomotor inhibition covaries with conscious detection.

Alex L White1, Martin Rolfs2.   

Abstract

Saccadic eye movements occur frequently even during attempted fixation, but they halt momentarily when a new stimulus appears. Here, we demonstrate that this rapid, involuntary "oculomotor freezing" reflex is yoked to fluctuations in explicit visual perception. Human observers reported the presence or absence of a brief visual stimulus while we recorded microsaccades, small spontaneous eye movements. We found that microsaccades were reflexively inhibited if and only if the observer reported seeing the stimulus, even when none was present. By applying a novel Bayesian classification technique to patterns of microsaccades on individual trials, we were able to decode the reported state of perception more accurately than the state of the stimulus (present vs. absent). Moreover, explicit perceptual sensitivity and the oculomotor reflex were both susceptible to orientation-specific adaptation. The adaptation effects suggest that the freezing reflex is mediated by signals processed in the visual cortex before reaching oculomotor control centers rather than relying on a direct subcortical route, as some previous research has suggested. We conclude that the reflexive inhibition of microsaccades immediately and inadvertently reveals when the observer becomes aware of a change in the environment. By providing an objective measure of conscious perceptual detection that does not require explicit reports, this finding opens doors to clinical applications and further investigations of perceptual awareness.
Copyright © 2016 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  contrast sensitivity; microsaccades; oculomotor inhibition; perceptual awareness; visual adaptation

Year:  2016        PMID: 27385794      PMCID: PMC5040379          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00268.2016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


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8.  An oculomotor continuum from exploration to fixation.

Authors:  Jorge Otero-Millan; Stephen L Macknik; Rachel E Langston; Susana Martinez-Conde
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10.  Decoding the Temporal Dynamics of Covert Spatial Attention Using Multivariate EEG Analysis: Contributions of Raw Amplitude and Alpha Power.

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