Tassinari G, Campara D, Benedetti C, Berlucchi G
Dipartimento di Scienze Neurologiche e della Visione, Sezione di Fisiologia Umana, Strada Le Grazie 8, 37134 Verona, Italy.
Exp Brain Res. 2002 Oct;146(4):523-30. doi: 10.1007/s00221-002-1192-8. Epub 2002 Sep 5.
The detection of sounds that come from a region of space recently exposed to acoustic stimulation is often slower than the detection of sounds coming from regions of space previously unexposed to acoustic stimulation. The relative increase in reaction time (RT) to targets in recently stimulated locations is generally termed "inhibition of return" (IOR). This term alludes to the possibility that spatial attention is biased against returning to recently visited locations, thus favoring the sampling of new sources of information. However, auditory IOR effects found in paradigms where subjects have to detect a first sound (cue) without making an overt response to it, and then respond as fast as possible to a second sound (target), may be due to a purely motor inhibition carried over from cue to target. Such motor inhibition has been shown to be maximal when cue and target belong to the same category, such as when they occupy the same spatial position. We have assessed the possible contribution of this motor inhibition to auditory IOR effects by having subjects respond to both cues and targets randomly presented in a right location and a left location. Reaction time to targets preceded by cues at the same location was longer than reaction times to targets preceded by cues at the opposite location (IOR effect). Compared to a condition in which subjects responded only to targets, the IOR effect was smaller, but still significant, in the double response condition, suggesting that such an effect depends on both motor inhibition and other factors, possibly related to covert spatial orienting and oculomotor control. A second experiment indicated that the IOR effect component independent of motor inhibition was slightly but significantly greater when space was relevant to the task because subjects had to report the positions of both cues and targets, compared to when space was irrelevant to the task because subjects were not required to report stimulus positions.
对最近受到声学刺激的空间区域发出的声音的检测,通常比对先前未受到声学刺激的空间区域发出的声音的检测要慢。对最近受刺激位置的目标的反应时间(RT)的相对增加通常被称为“返回抑制”(IOR)。这个术语暗示了空间注意力可能会偏向于不返回最近访问过的位置,从而有利于对新的信息源进行采样。然而,在一些范式中发现的听觉IOR效应,即受试者必须检测第一个声音(提示音)而不对其做出明显反应,然后尽快对第二个声音(目标音)做出反应,这可能是由于从提示音到目标音的一种纯粹的运动抑制。当提示音和目标音属于同一类别时,例如当它们占据相同的空间位置时,这种运动抑制已被证明是最大的。我们通过让受试者对在右侧位置和左侧位置随机呈现的提示音和目标音都做出反应,评估了这种运动抑制对听觉IOR效应的可能贡献。与在相反位置的提示音之后的目标音相比,在同一位置的提示音之后的目标音的反应时间更长(IOR效应)。与受试者只对目标音做出反应的情况相比,在双重反应条件下,IOR效应较小,但仍然显著,这表明这种效应既取决于运动抑制,也取决于其他因素,可能与隐蔽的空间定向和眼球运动控制有关。第二个实验表明,当空间与任务相关时,即受试者必须报告提示音和目标音的位置,与空间与任务不相关时,即受试者不需要报告刺激位置相比,独立于运动抑制的IOR效应成分略大但显著。