Literature DB >> 32001610

Post-Saccadic Face Processing Is Modulated by Pre-Saccadic Preview: Evidence from Fixation-Related Potentials.

Antimo Buonocore1,2, Olaf Dimigen3, David Melcher4,5.   

Abstract

Humans actively sample their environment with saccadic eye movements to bring relevant information into high-acuity foveal vision. Despite being lower in resolution, peripheral information is also available before each saccade. How the pre-saccadic extrafoveal preview of a visual object influences its post-saccadic processing is still an unanswered question. The current study investigated this question by simultaneously recording behavior and fixation-related brain potentials while human subjects made saccades to face stimuli. We manipulated the relationship between pre-saccadic "previews" and post-saccadic images to explicitly isolate the influences of the former. Subjects performed a gender discrimination task on a newly foveated face under three preview conditions: scrambled face, incongruent face (different identity from the foveated face), and congruent face (same identity). As expected, reaction times were faster after a congruent-face preview compared with a scrambled-face preview. Importantly, intact face previews (either incongruent or congruent) resulted in a massive reduction of post-saccadic neural responses. Specifically, we analyzed the classic face-selective N170 component at occipitotemporal electroencephalogram electrodes, which was still present in our experiments with active looking. However, the post-saccadic N170 was strongly attenuated following intact-face previews compared with the scrambled condition. This large and long-lasting decrease in evoked activity is consistent with a trans-saccadic mechanism of prediction that influences category-specific neural processing at the start of a new fixation. These findings constrain theories of visual stability and show that the extrafoveal preview methodology can be a useful tool to investigate its underlying mechanisms.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Neural correlates of object recognition have traditionally been studied by flashing stimuli to the central visual field. This procedure differs in fundamental ways from natural vision, where viewers actively sample the environment with eye movements and also obtain a low-resolution preview of soon-to-be-fixated objects. Here we show that the N170, a classic electrophysiological marker of the structural encoding of faces, also occurs during a more natural viewing condition but is strongly reduced due to extrafoveal preprocessing (preview benefit). Our results therefore highlight the importance of peripheral vision during trans-saccadic processing in building a coherent and stable representation of the world around us.
Copyright © 2020 the authors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  N170; active prediction; eye movements; fixation related potentials; visual stability

Year:  2020        PMID: 32001610      PMCID: PMC7083284          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0861-19.2020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  6 in total

1.  A new paradigm for investigating real-world social behavior and its neural underpinnings.

Authors:  Arish Alreja; Michael J Ward; Qianli Ma; Brian E Russ; Stephan Bickel; Nelleke C Van Wouwe; Jorge A González-Martínez; Joseph S Neimat; Taylor J Abel; Anto Bagić; Lisa S Parker; R Mark Richardson; Charles E Schroeder; Louis-Philippe Morency; Avniel Singh Ghuman
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2022-07-25

2.  Fixation-related saccadic inhibition in free viewing in response to stimulus saliency.

Authors:  Oren Kadosh; Yoram S Bonneh
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 4.996

3.  Task-Irrelevant Visual Forms Facilitate Covert and Overt Spatial Selection.

Authors:  Amarender R Bogadhi; Antimo Buonocore; Ziad M Hafed
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2020-10-30       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Toward Measuring Target Perception: First-Order and Second-Order Deep Network Pipeline for Classification of Fixation-Related Potentials.

Authors:  Hong Zeng; Junjie Shen; Wenming Zheng; Aiguo Song; Jia Liu
Journal:  J Healthc Eng       Date:  2020-11-19       Impact factor: 2.682

5.  The behavioural preview effect with faces is susceptible to statistical regularities: Evidence for predictive processing across the saccade.

Authors:  Christoph Huber-Huber; David Melcher
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-01-13       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Regression-based analysis of combined EEG and eye-tracking data: Theory and applications.

Authors:  Olaf Dimigen; Benedikt V Ehinger
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 2.240

  6 in total

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