Pre-saccadic attention spreads to stimuli forming a perceptual group with the saccade target
Pre-saccadic attention spreads to stimuli forming a perceptual group with the saccade target
The pre-saccadic attention shift—a rapid increase in visual sensitivity at the target—is an inevitable precursor of saccadic eye movements. Saccade targets are often parts of the objects that are of interest to the active observer. Although the link between saccades and covert attention shifts is well established, it remains unclear if pre-saccadic attention selects the location of the eye movement target or rather the entire object that occupies this location. Indeed, several neurophysiological studies suggest that attentional modulations of neural activity in visual cortex spreads across parts of objects (e.g., elements grouped by Gestalt principles) that contain the target location of a saccade. To understand the nature of pre-saccadic attentional selection, we examined how visual sensitivity, measured in a challenging orientation discrimination task, changes during saccade preparation at locations that are perceptually grouped with the saccade target. In Experiment 1, using grouping by color in a delayed-saccade task, we found no consistent spread of attention to locations that formed a perceptual group with the saccade target. However, performance depended on the side of the stimulus arrangement relative to the saccade target location, an effect we discuss with respect to attentional momentum. In Experiment 2, employing stronger perceptual grouping cues (color and motion) and an immediate-saccade task, we obtained a reliable grouping effect: Attention spread to locations that were perceptually grouped with the saccade target while saccade preparation was underway. We also replicated the side effect observed in Experiment 1. These results provide evidence that the pre-saccadic attention spreads beyond the target location along the saccade direction, and selects scene elements that—based on Gestalt criteria—are likely to belong to the same object as the saccade target.
179-198
Shurygina, Olga
de986793-1f96-40ee-b860-14fd595b467b
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Rolfs, Martin
fff6eed7-98e3-48cb-b047-d62e4b2af4ce
12 May 2021
Shurygina, Olga
de986793-1f96-40ee-b860-14fd595b467b
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Rolfs, Martin
fff6eed7-98e3-48cb-b047-d62e4b2af4ce
Shurygina, Olga, Pooresmaeili, Arezoo and Rolfs, Martin
(2021)
Pre-saccadic attention spreads to stimuli forming a perceptual group with the saccade target.
Cortex, 140, .
(doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2021.03.020).
Abstract
The pre-saccadic attention shift—a rapid increase in visual sensitivity at the target—is an inevitable precursor of saccadic eye movements. Saccade targets are often parts of the objects that are of interest to the active observer. Although the link between saccades and covert attention shifts is well established, it remains unclear if pre-saccadic attention selects the location of the eye movement target or rather the entire object that occupies this location. Indeed, several neurophysiological studies suggest that attentional modulations of neural activity in visual cortex spreads across parts of objects (e.g., elements grouped by Gestalt principles) that contain the target location of a saccade. To understand the nature of pre-saccadic attentional selection, we examined how visual sensitivity, measured in a challenging orientation discrimination task, changes during saccade preparation at locations that are perceptually grouped with the saccade target. In Experiment 1, using grouping by color in a delayed-saccade task, we found no consistent spread of attention to locations that formed a perceptual group with the saccade target. However, performance depended on the side of the stimulus arrangement relative to the saccade target location, an effect we discuss with respect to attentional momentum. In Experiment 2, employing stronger perceptual grouping cues (color and motion) and an immediate-saccade task, we obtained a reliable grouping effect: Attention spread to locations that were perceptually grouped with the saccade target while saccade preparation was underway. We also replicated the side effect observed in Experiment 1. These results provide evidence that the pre-saccadic attention spreads beyond the target location along the saccade direction, and selects scene elements that—based on Gestalt criteria—are likely to belong to the same object as the saccade target.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 March 2021
Published date: 12 May 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 481592
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481592
ISSN: 0010-9452
PURE UUID: cc2e5346-61b3-46ee-a922-1777a7faa993
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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2023 16:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
Olga Shurygina
Author:
Arezoo Pooresmaeili
Author:
Martin Rolfs
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