Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York, New York 10003 and
School of Psychological Sciences and Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel.
J Neurosci. 2019 Jan 9;39(2):353-363. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1926-18.2018. Epub 2018 Nov 20.
Our visual input is constantly changing, but not all moments are equally relevant. Visual temporal attention, the prioritization of visual information at specific points in time, increases perceptual sensitivity at behaviorally relevant times. The dynamic processes underlying this increase are unclear. During fixation, humans make small eye movements called microsaccades, and inhibiting microsaccades improves perception of brief stimuli. Here, we investigated whether temporal attention changes the pattern of microsaccades in anticipation of brief stimuli. Human observers (female and male) judged stimuli presented within a short sequence. Observers were given either an informative precue to attend to one of the stimuli, which was likely to be probed, or an uninformative (neutral) precue. We found strong microsaccadic inhibition before the stimulus sequence, likely due to its predictable onset. Critically, this anticipatory inhibition was stronger when the first target in the sequence (T1) was precued (task-relevant) than when the precue was uninformative. Moreover, the timing of the last microsaccade before T1 and the first microsaccade after T1 shifted such that both occurred earlier when T1 was precued than when the precue was uninformative. Finally, the timing of the nearest pre- and post-T1 microsaccades affected task performance. Directing voluntary temporal attention therefore affects microsaccades, helping to stabilize fixation at the most relevant moments over and above the effect of predictability. Just as saccading to a relevant stimulus can be an overt correlate of the allocation of spatial attention, precisely timed gaze stabilization can be an overt correlate of the allocation of temporal attention. We pay attention at moments in time when a relevant event is likely to occur. Such temporal attention improves our visual perception, but how it does so is not well understood. Here, we discovered a new behavioral correlate of voluntary, or goal-directed, temporal attention. We found that the pattern of small fixational eye movements called microsaccades changes around behaviorally relevant moments in a way that stabilizes the position of the eyes. Microsaccades during a brief visual stimulus can impair perception of that stimulus. Therefore, such fixation stabilization may contribute to the improvement of visual perception at attended times. This link suggests that, in addition to cortical areas, subcortical areas mediating eye movements may be recruited with temporal attention.
我们的视觉输入在不断变化,但并非所有时刻都同等重要。视觉时间注意力是指在特定时间对视觉信息的优先级排序,它可以提高行为相关时刻的感知敏感性。目前尚不清楚这种增加的背后的动态过程。在注视时,人类会进行微小的眼动,称为微扫视,抑制微扫视可以提高对短暂刺激的感知。在这里,我们研究了时间注意力是否会改变对短暂刺激的微扫视模式。人类观察者(女性和男性)判断在短序列中呈现的刺激。观察者要么接受一个信息丰富的提示,提示关注其中一个可能被探测到的刺激,要么接受一个无信息的(中性)提示。我们发现,在刺激序列之前,会产生强烈的微扫视抑制,这可能是由于其可预测的开始。关键的是,当序列中的第一个目标(T1)被提示(与任务相关)时,这种预测性抑制比提示无信息时更强。此外,T1 之前的最后一次微扫视和 T1 之后的第一次微扫视的时间都提前了,当 T1 被提示时比无信息时更早。最后,T1 前后最近的微扫视的时间影响了任务表现。因此,直接引导时间注意力会影响微扫视,有助于在可预测性的影响之外,在最相关的时刻稳定注视。就像扫视到一个相关的刺激可以是空间注意力分配的明显相关物一样,精确计时的凝视稳定也可以是时间注意力分配的明显相关物。我们在相关事件可能发生的时刻集中注意力。这种时间注意力可以提高我们的视觉感知,但它是如何做到的还不太清楚。在这里,我们发现了自愿的或目标导向的时间注意力的一个新的行为相关物。我们发现,一种称为微扫视的小固定眼动的模式会在行为相关时刻发生变化,从而稳定眼睛的位置。短暂视觉刺激期间的微扫视会损害对该刺激的感知。因此,这种固定稳定性可能有助于提高注意力时刻的视觉感知。这种联系表明,除了皮质区域外,介导眼动的皮质下区域可能会随着时间注意力而被招募。