Saccade Reorienting Is Facilitated by Pausing the Oculomotor Program

As we look around the world, selecting our targets, competing events may occur at other locations. Depending on current goals, the viewer must decide whether to look at new events or to ignore them. Two experimental paradigms formalize these response options: double-step saccades and saccadic inhibi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2017-12, Vol.29 (12), p.2068-2080
Hauptverfasser: Buonocore, Antimo, Purokayastha, Simran, McIntosh, Robert D.
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container_title Journal of cognitive neuroscience
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creator Buonocore, Antimo
Purokayastha, Simran
McIntosh, Robert D.
description As we look around the world, selecting our targets, competing events may occur at other locations. Depending on current goals, the viewer must decide whether to look at new events or to ignore them. Two experimental paradigms formalize these response options: double-step saccades and saccadic inhibition. In the first, the viewer must reorient to a newly appearing target; in the second, they must ignore it. Until now, the relationship between reorienting and inhibition has been unexplored. In three experiments, we found saccadic inhibition ∼100 msec after a new target onset, regardless of the task instruction. Moreover, if this automatic inhibition is boosted by an irrelevant flash, reorienting is facilitated, suggesting that saccadic inhibition plays a crucial role in visual behavior, as a bottom–up brake that buys the time needed for decisional processes to act. Saccadic inhibition may be a ubiquitous pause signal that provides the flexibility for voluntary behavior to emerge.
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source MEDLINE; MIT Press Journals
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Behavior
Decision making
Experiments
Eye Movement Measurements
Humans
Inhibition (Psychology)
Motor Activity
Orientation
Saccades
Saccadic eye movements
Visualization
Young Adult
title Saccade Reorienting Is Facilitated by Pausing the Oculomotor Program
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