The effect of subliminal incentives on goal-directed eye movements
The effect of subliminal incentives on goal-directed eye movements
Over the last decades, several studies have demonstrated that conscious and unconscious reward incentives both affect performance in physical and cognitive tasks, suggesting that goal-pursuit can arise from an unconscious will. Whether the planning of goal-directed saccadic eye movements during an effortful task can also be affected by subliminal reward cues has not been systematically investigated. We employed a novel task where participants made several eye movements back and forth between a fixation point and a number of peripheral targets. The total number of targets visited by the eyes in a fixed amount of time determined participants' monetary gain. The magnitude of the reward at stake was briefly shown at the beginning of each trial and masked by pattern images superimposed in time so that at shorter display durations participants perceived reward incentives subliminally. We found a main effect of reward across all display durations as higher reward enhanced participants' oculomotor effort measured as the frequency and peak velocity of saccades. This effect was strongest for consciously perceived rewards but also occurred when rewards were subliminally perceived. Although we did not find a statistically significant dissociation between the reward-related modulation of different saccadic parameters, across two experiments the most robust effect of subliminal rewards was observed for the modulation of the saccadic frequency but not the peak velocity. These results suggest that multiple indices of oculomotor effort can be incentivized by subliminal rewards and that saccadic frequency may provide the most sensitive indicator of subliminal incentivization of eye movements. </jats:p>
Kilian Hinze, Vasko
34cdc8a2-62ab-46c6-95b8-c2090bde2912
Uslu, Ozge
bf494b75-475f-423a-9b1d-1bb1f11f1dd0
Antono, Jessica Emily
9e03e2d3-1d8d-4b08-bf00-cab5fb1cf8db
Wilke, Melanie
0bb3f507-a0ba-4953-94d0-dcf4114bc298
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
10 November 2021
Kilian Hinze, Vasko
34cdc8a2-62ab-46c6-95b8-c2090bde2912
Uslu, Ozge
bf494b75-475f-423a-9b1d-1bb1f11f1dd0
Antono, Jessica Emily
9e03e2d3-1d8d-4b08-bf00-cab5fb1cf8db
Wilke, Melanie
0bb3f507-a0ba-4953-94d0-dcf4114bc298
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Kilian Hinze, Vasko, Uslu, Ozge, Antono, Jessica Emily, Wilke, Melanie and Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
(2021)
The effect of subliminal incentives on goal-directed eye movements.
Journal of Neurophysiology, 126 (6).
(doi:10.1101/2020.11.11.377986).
Abstract
Over the last decades, several studies have demonstrated that conscious and unconscious reward incentives both affect performance in physical and cognitive tasks, suggesting that goal-pursuit can arise from an unconscious will. Whether the planning of goal-directed saccadic eye movements during an effortful task can also be affected by subliminal reward cues has not been systematically investigated. We employed a novel task where participants made several eye movements back and forth between a fixation point and a number of peripheral targets. The total number of targets visited by the eyes in a fixed amount of time determined participants' monetary gain. The magnitude of the reward at stake was briefly shown at the beginning of each trial and masked by pattern images superimposed in time so that at shorter display durations participants perceived reward incentives subliminally. We found a main effect of reward across all display durations as higher reward enhanced participants' oculomotor effort measured as the frequency and peak velocity of saccades. This effect was strongest for consciously perceived rewards but also occurred when rewards were subliminally perceived. Although we did not find a statistically significant dissociation between the reward-related modulation of different saccadic parameters, across two experiments the most robust effect of subliminal rewards was observed for the modulation of the saccadic frequency but not the peak velocity. These results suggest that multiple indices of oculomotor effort can be incentivized by subliminal rewards and that saccadic frequency may provide the most sensitive indicator of subliminal incentivization of eye movements. </jats:p>
Text
jn.00414.2021
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 21 October 2021
Published date: 10 November 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 481585
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481585
ISSN: 0022-3077
PURE UUID: 521a7276-7566-47b9-ae12-aebdd41ed43e
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 04 Sep 2023 16:45
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Vasko Kilian Hinze
Author:
Ozge Uslu
Author:
Jessica Emily Antono
Author:
Melanie Wilke
Author:
Arezoo Pooresmaeili
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics