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Eye movements during object recognition in visual agnosia

Eye movements during object recognition in visual agnosia
Eye movements during object recognition in visual agnosia
This paper reports the first ever detailed study about eye movement patterns during single object recognition in visual agnosia. Eye movements were recorded in a patient with an integrative agnosic deficit during two recognition tasks: common object naming and novel object recognition memory. The patient showed normal directional biases in saccades and fixation dwell times in both tasks and was as likely as controls to fixate within object bounding contour regardless of recognition accuracy. In contrast, following initial saccades of similar amplitude to controls, the patient showed a bias for short saccades. In object naming, but not in recognition memory, the similarity of the spatial distributions of patient and control fixations was modulated by recognition accuracy. The study provides new evidence about how eye movements can be used to elucidate the functional impairments underlying object recognition deficits. We argue that the results reflect a breakdown in normal functional processes involved in the integration of shape information across object structure during the visual perception of shape.
0028-3932
2142-2153
Leek, Elwyn
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Leek, Elwyn
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88

Leek, Elwyn (2012) Eye movements during object recognition in visual agnosia. Neuropsychologia, 50 (9), 2142-2153. (doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.05.005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper reports the first ever detailed study about eye movement patterns during single object recognition in visual agnosia. Eye movements were recorded in a patient with an integrative agnosic deficit during two recognition tasks: common object naming and novel object recognition memory. The patient showed normal directional biases in saccades and fixation dwell times in both tasks and was as likely as controls to fixate within object bounding contour regardless of recognition accuracy. In contrast, following initial saccades of similar amplitude to controls, the patient showed a bias for short saccades. In object naming, but not in recognition memory, the similarity of the spatial distributions of patient and control fixations was modulated by recognition accuracy. The study provides new evidence about how eye movements can be used to elucidate the functional impairments underlying object recognition deficits. We argue that the results reflect a breakdown in normal functional processes involved in the integration of shape information across object structure during the visual perception of shape.

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More information

Published date: 21 May 2012

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494828
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494828
ISSN: 0028-3932
PURE UUID: 1ed9ccd8-f89d-4d41-8585-b1768db376c3
ORCID for Elwyn Leek: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9258-7504

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Date deposited: 16 Oct 2024 16:41
Last modified: 17 Oct 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Elwyn Leek ORCID iD

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