| Literature DB >> 34218299 |
Kathrin Chiffi1,2, Lorenzo Diana1,2,3, Matthias Hartmann1,4, Dario Cazzoli1,2,5, Claudio L Bassetti2, René M Müri1,2,5, Aleksandra K Eberhard-Moscicka6,7.
Abstract
When humans visually explore an image, they typically tend to start exploring its left side. This phenomenon, so-called pseudoneglect, is well known, but its time-course has only sparsely been studied. Furthermore, it is unclear whether age influences pseudoneglect, and the relationship between visuo-spatial attentional asymmetries in a free visual exploration task and a classical line bisection task has not been established. To address these questions, 60 healthy participants, aged between 22 and 86, were assessed by means of a free visual exploration task with a series of naturalistic, colour photographs of everyday scenes, while their gaze was recorded by means of a contact-free eye-tracking system. Furthermore, a classical line bisection task was administered, and information concerning handedness and subjective alertness during the experiment was obtained. The results revealed a time-sensitive window during visual exploration, between 260 and 960 ms, in which age was a significant predictor of the leftward bias in gaze position, i.e., of pseudoneglect. Moreover, pseudoneglect as assessed by the line bisection task correlated with the average gaze position throughout a time-window of 300-1490 ms during the visual exploration task. These results suggest that age influences visual exploration and pseudoneglect in a time-sensitive fashion, and that the degree of pseudoneglect in the line bisection task correlates with the average gaze position during visual exploration in a time-sensitive manner.Entities:
Keywords: Eye movements; Line bisection; Pseudoneglect; Visual exploration
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34218299 PMCID: PMC8448707 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-021-06165-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Overview of demographic data of the 60 participants included in the study
| Mean ± SD | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 43.05 ± 19.60 | 22–86 |
| Education (years) | 17.19 ± 2.99 | 8–22 |
| Subjective alertness | 7.36 ± 1.84 | 2–10 |
| Handedness | 88.3% ( | |
| Gender | 51.7% ( | |
Fig. 1Example of stimuli used in the free visual exploration task
Fig. 2Time-course of the exploration pattern, averaged across all images and all participants. The grey area around the smoothed red line represents the standard error of the mean of the averaged gaze position. The blue box represents the time-window during which age was a significant predictor for the average gaze position
Fig. 3Correlation between age and the average horizontal gaze deviation in pixels between 260 and 960 ms, indicating attenuation of the leftward bias with increasing age
Fig. 4Correlation between the bias in the line bisection task (percentage deviation from the actual midline) and the average horizontal fixation deviation in the free visual exploration task during the time interval between 300 and 1490 ms; this significant correlation indicates that a stronger leftward bias in the line bisection task correlated with a stronger leftward deviation in the free visual exploration