Literature DB >> 28539394

Automatic and intentional influences on saccade landing.

David Aagten-Murphy1, Paul M Bays2.   

Abstract

Saccadic eye movements enable us to rapidly direct our high-resolution fovea onto relevant parts of the visual world. However, while we can intentionally select a location as a saccade target, the wider visual scene also influences our executed movements. In the presence of multiple objects, eye movements may be "captured" to the location of a distractor object, or be biased toward the intermediate position between objects (the "global effect"). Here we examined how the relative strengths of the global effect and visual object capture changed with saccade latency, the separation between visual items and stimulus contrast. Importantly, while many previous studies have omitted giving observers explicit instructions, we instructed participants to either saccade to a specified target object or to the midpoint between two stimuli. This allowed us to examine how their explicit movement goal influenced the likelihood that their saccades terminated at either the target, distractor, or intermediate locations. Using a probabilistic mixture model, we found evidence that both visual object capture and the global effect co-occurred at short latencies and declined as latency increased. As object separation increased, capture came to dominate the landing positions of fast saccades, with reduced global effect. Using the mixture model fits, we dissociated the proportion of unavoidably captured saccades to each location from those intentionally directed to the task goal. From this we could extract the time course of competition between automatic capture and intentional targeting. We show that task instructions substantially altered the distribution of saccade landing points, even at the shortest latencies.NEW & NOTEWORTHY When making an eye movement to a target location, the presence of a nearby distractor can cause the saccade to unintentionally terminate at the distractor itself or the average position in between stimuli. With probabilistic mixture models, we quantified how both unavoidable capture and goal-directed targeting were influenced by changing the task and the target-distractor separation. Using this novel technique, we could extract the time course over which automatic and intentional processes compete for control of saccades.
Copyright © 2017 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  global effect; oculomotor capture; target selection; top-down selection

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28539394      PMCID: PMC5547269          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00141.2017

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


  73 in total

1.  Express averaging saccades in monkeys.

Authors:  I H Chou; M A Sommer; P H Schiller
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Authors:  T P Trappenberg; M C Dorris; D P Munoz; R M Klein
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3.  Saccade target selection in visual search: accuracy improves when more distractors are present.

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5.  Saccadic inhibition reveals the timing of automatic and voluntary signals in the human brain.

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6.  The global effect for antisaccades.

Authors:  Jayalakshmi Viswanathan; Jason J S Barton
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2012-12-20       Impact factor: 1.972

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Authors:  C Coëffé; J K O'Regan
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  1987       Impact factor: 1.886

8.  Latency dependence of colour-based target vs nontarget discrimination by the saccadic system.

Authors:  F P Ottes; J A Van Gisbergen; J J Eggermont
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  1985       Impact factor: 1.886

Review 9.  Physiology and pathology of eye-head coordination.

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Journal:  Prog Retin Eye Res       Date:  2007-04-14       Impact factor: 21.198

10.  How memory mechanisms are a key component in the guidance of our eye movements: evidence from the global effect.

Authors:  J D Silvis; S Van der Stigchel
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2014-04
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  5 in total

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Review 2.  Under time pressure, the exogenous modulation of saccade plans is ubiquitous, intricate, and lawful.

Authors:  Emilio Salinas; Terrence R Stanford
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2021-11-21       Impact factor: 6.627

3.  Voluntary and involuntary contributions to perceptually guided saccadic choices resolved with millisecond precision.

Authors:  Emilio Salinas; Benjamin R Steinberg; Lauren A Sussman; Sophia M Fry; Christopher K Hauser; Denise D Anderson; Terrence R Stanford
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4.  Visual attention is not deployed at the endpoint of averaging saccades.

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Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2018-06-25       Impact factor: 8.029

5.  Visual attention and eye movement control during oculomotor competition.

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Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2020-09-02       Impact factor: 2.240

  5 in total

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