Felßberg Anna-Maria, Dombrowe Isabel
Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany.
Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany.
Vision Res. 2018 Jan;142:20-26. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2017.10.004. Epub 2017 Nov 2.
It is commonly assumed that saccades in the dark are slower than saccades in a lit room. Early studies that investigated this issue using electrooculography (EOG) often compared memory guided saccades in darkness to visually guided saccades in an illuminated room. However, later studies showed that memory guided saccades are generally slower than visually guided saccades. Research on this topic is further complicated by the fact that the different existing eyetracking methods do not necessarily lead to consistent measurements. In the present study, we independently manipulated task (memory guided/visually guided) and screen brightness (dark, medium and light) in an otherwise completely dark room, and measured the peak velocity and the duration of the participant's saccades using a popular pupil-cornea reflection (p-cr) eyetracker (Eyelink 1000). Based on a critical reading of the literature, including a recent study using cornea-reflection (cr) eye tracking, we did not expect any velocity or duration differences between the three brightness conditions. We found that memory guided saccades were generally slower than visually guided saccades. In both tasks, eye movements on a medium and light background were equally fast and had similar durations. However, saccades on the dark background were slower and had shorter durations, even after we corrected for the effect of pupil size changes. This means that this is most likely an artifact of current pupil-based eye tracking. We conclude that the common assumption that saccades in the dark are slower than in the light is probably not true, however pupil-based eyetrackers tend to underestimate the peak velocity of saccades on very dark backgrounds, creating the impression that this might be the case.
人们通常认为,在黑暗中的扫视比在有灯光的房间里的扫视要慢。早期使用眼电图(EOG)研究这个问题的研究,常常将黑暗中记忆引导的扫视与有光照房间里视觉引导的扫视进行比较。然而,后来的研究表明,记忆引导的扫视通常比视觉引导的扫视要慢。由于现有的不同眼动追踪方法不一定能得出一致的测量结果,这一主题的研究变得更加复杂。在本研究中,我们在一个完全黑暗的房间里,独立操纵任务(记忆引导/视觉引导)和屏幕亮度(暗、中、亮),并使用一种流行的瞳孔角膜反射(p-cr)眼动仪(Eyelink 1000)测量参与者扫视的峰值速度和持续时间。基于对文献的批判性阅读,包括最近一项使用角膜反射(cr)眼动追踪的研究,我们预计在三种亮度条件下不会有速度或持续时间的差异。我们发现,记忆引导的扫视通常比视觉引导的扫视要慢。在这两项任务中,在中等亮度和明亮背景上的眼动速度同样快,持续时间也相似。然而,即使在我们校正了瞳孔大小变化的影响之后,在黑暗背景上的扫视仍然较慢,持续时间也较短。这意味着这很可能是当前基于瞳孔的眼动追踪的一种假象。我们得出结论,黑暗中的扫视比明亮中的扫视慢这一普遍假设可能并不正确,然而基于瞳孔的眼动仪往往会低估在非常黑暗背景上扫视的峰值速度,从而造成这种情况可能存在的印象。