| Literature DB >> 30362205 |
Indrajeet Indrajeet1, Supriya Ray1.
Abstract
An inhibitory control is exerted when the context in which a movement has been planned changes abruptly making the impending movement inappropriate. Neurons in the frontal eye field and superior colliculus steadily increase activity before a saccadic eye movement, but cease the rise below a threshold when an impending saccade is withheld in response to an unexpected stop-signal. This type of neural modulation has been majorly considered as an outcome of a race between preparatory and inhibitory processes ramping up to reach a decision criterion. An alternative model claims that the rate of saccade planning is diminished exclusively when the stop-signal is detected within a stipulated period. However, due to a dearth of empirical evidence in support of the latter model, it remains unclear how the detectability of the stop-signal influences saccade inhibition. In our study, human participants selected a visual target to look at by discriminating a go-cue. Infrequently they cancelled saccade and reported whether they saw the stop-signal. The go-cue and stop-signal both were embedded in a stream of irrelevant stimuli presented in rapid succession. Participants exhibited difficulty in detection of the stop-signal when presented almost immediately after the go-cue. We found a robust relationship between the detectability of the stop-signal and the odds of saccade inhibition. Saccade latency increased exponentially with the maximum time available for processing the stop-signal before gaze shifted. A model in which the stop-signal onset spontaneously decelerated progressive saccade planning with the magnitude proportional to its detectability accounted for the data.Entities:
Keywords: attention; control; eye movement; model; perception
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30362205 DOI: 10.1111/ejn.14220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Neurosci ISSN: 0953-816X Impact factor: 3.386