Aagten-Murphy David, Bays Paul M
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Aug 1;118(2):1105-1122. doi: 10.1152/jn.00141.2017. Epub 2017 May 24.
Saccadic eye movements enable us to rapidly direct our high-resolution fovea onto relevant parts of the visual world. However, while we can intentionally select a location as a saccade target, the wider visual scene also influences our executed movements. In the presence of multiple objects, eye movements may be "captured" to the location of a distractor object, or be biased toward the intermediate position between objects (the "global effect"). Here we examined how the relative strengths of the global effect and visual object capture changed with saccade latency, the separation between visual items and stimulus contrast. Importantly, while many previous studies have omitted giving observers explicit instructions, we instructed participants to either saccade to a specified target object or to the midpoint between two stimuli. This allowed us to examine how their explicit movement goal influenced the likelihood that their saccades terminated at either the target, distractor, or intermediate locations. Using a probabilistic mixture model, we found evidence that both visual object capture and the global effect co-occurred at short latencies and declined as latency increased. As object separation increased, capture came to dominate the landing positions of fast saccades, with reduced global effect. Using the mixture model fits, we dissociated the proportion of unavoidably captured saccades to each location from those intentionally directed to the task goal. From this we could extract the time course of competition between automatic capture and intentional targeting. We show that task instructions substantially altered the distribution of saccade landing points, even at the shortest latencies. When making an eye movement to a target location, the presence of a nearby distractor can cause the saccade to unintentionally terminate at the distractor itself or the average position in between stimuli. With probabilistic mixture models, we quantified how both unavoidable capture and goal-directed targeting were influenced by changing the task and the target-distractor separation. Using this novel technique, we could extract the time course over which automatic and intentional processes compete for control of saccades.
扫视眼动使我们能够迅速将高分辨率的中央凹对准视觉世界的相关部分。然而,虽然我们可以有意选择一个位置作为扫视目标,但更广阔的视觉场景也会影响我们执行的动作。在存在多个物体的情况下,眼动可能会被“捕获”到干扰物体的位置,或者偏向物体之间的中间位置(“全局效应”)。在这里,我们研究了全局效应和视觉物体捕获的相对强度如何随着扫视潜伏期、视觉项目之间的间隔以及刺激对比度而变化。重要的是,虽然之前的许多研究都没有给观察者明确的指示,但我们指示参与者要么扫视到指定的目标物体,要么扫视到两个刺激之间的中点。这使我们能够研究他们明确的运动目标如何影响扫视在目标、干扰物或中间位置终止的可能性。使用概率混合模型,我们发现有证据表明视觉物体捕获和全局效应在短潜伏期时同时出现,并随着潜伏期的增加而下降。随着物体间隔的增加,捕获在快速扫视的着陆位置中占主导地位,全局效应减弱。使用混合模型拟合,我们将不可避免地捕获到每个位置的扫视比例与有意指向任务目标的扫视比例区分开来。由此我们可以提取自动捕获和有意瞄准之间竞争的时间进程。我们表明,即使在最短的潜伏期,任务指令也会显著改变扫视着陆点的分布。当向目标位置进行眼动时,附近干扰物的存在可能会导致扫视无意中在干扰物本身或刺激之间的平均位置终止。通过概率混合模型,我们量化了不可避免的捕获和目标导向的瞄准如何受到任务和目标 - 干扰物间隔变化的影响。使用这种新技术,我们可以提取自动和有意过程竞争控制扫视的时间进程。