Kotowicz Andreas, Rutishauser Ueli, Koch Christof
Computation and Neural Systems, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, CA, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2010 Apr 13;4:31. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2010.00031. eCollection 2010.
it allows us to quickly find the objects that we are looking for. During active search for an object (target), eye movements are made to different parts of the scene. Fixation locations are chosen based on a combination of information about the target and the visual input. At the end of a successful search, the eyes typically fixate on the target. But does this imply that target identification occurs while looking at it? The duration of a typical fixation ( approximately 170 ms) and neuronal latencies of both the oculomotor system and the visual stream indicate that there might not be enough time to do so. Previous studies have suggested the following solution to this dilemma: the target is identified extrafoveally and this event will trigger a saccade towards the target location. However this has not been experimentally verified. Here we test the hypothesis that subjects recognize the target before they look at it using a search display of oriented colored bars. Using a gaze-contingent real-time technique, we prematurely stopped search shortly after subjects fixated the target. Afterwards, we asked subjects to identify the target location. We find that subjects can identify the target location even when fixating on the target for less than 10 ms. Longer fixations on the target do not increase detection performance but increase confidence. In contrast, subjects cannot perform this task if they are not allowed to move their eyes. Thus, information about the target during conjunction search for colored oriented bars can, in some circumstances, be acquired at least one fixation ahead of reaching the target. The final fixation serves to increase confidence rather then performance, illustrating a distinct role of the final fixation for the subjective judgment of confidence rather than accuracy.
它使我们能够迅速找到我们正在寻找的物体。在主动搜索一个物体(目标)时,眼睛会向场景的不同部分移动。注视位置是根据有关目标的信息和视觉输入的组合来选择的。在成功搜索结束时,眼睛通常会注视目标。但这是否意味着在注视目标时就进行了目标识别呢?典型注视的持续时间(约170毫秒)以及眼动系统和视觉通路的神经元潜伏期表明,可能没有足够的时间来进行目标识别。先前的研究针对这一困境提出了以下解决方案:目标是在中央凹外被识别的,并且这一事件会触发向目标位置的扫视。然而,这一点尚未得到实验验证。在这里,我们使用一组有方向的彩色条的搜索显示来测试这一假设,即受试者在注视目标之前就能识别目标。我们采用一种注视相关的实时技术,在受试者注视目标后不久就提前终止搜索。之后,我们要求受试者识别目标位置。我们发现,即使在注视目标不到10毫秒的情况下,受试者也能识别目标位置。对目标的较长时间注视并不会提高检测性能,但会增加信心。相比之下,如果不允许受试者移动眼睛,他们就无法完成这项任务。因此,在对彩色有方向条进行联合搜索时,有关目标的信息在某些情况下可以在到达目标之前至少一个注视提前获取。最后的注视起到增加信心而非提高性能的作用,这说明了最后的注视在主观信心判断而非准确性方面所起的独特作用。