Meghanathan Radha Nila, van Leeuwen Cees, Giannini Marcello, Nikolaev Andrey R
Laboratory for Perceptual Dynamics, Brain & Cognition Research Unit, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Center for Cognitive Science, University of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Laboratory for Perceptual Dynamics, Brain & Cognition Research Unit, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Center for Cognitive Science, University of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Vision Res. 2020 Oct;175:90-101. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2020.07.001. Epub 2020 Aug 11.
Eye movement research has shown that attention shifts from the currently fixated location to the next before a saccade is executed. We investigated whether the cost of the attention shift depends on higher-order processing at the time of fixation, in particular on visual working memory load differences between fixations and refixations on task-relevant items. The attention shift is reflected in EEG activity in the saccade-related potential (SRP). In a free viewing task involving visual search and memorization of multiple targets amongst distractors, we compared the SRP in first fixations versus refixations on targets and distractors. The task-relevance of targets implies that more information will be loaded in memory (e.g. both identity and location) than for distractors (e.g. location only). First fixations will involve greater memory load than refixations, since first fixations involve loading of new items, while refixations involve rehearsal of previously visited items. The SRP in the interval preceding the saccade away from a target or distractor revealed that saccade preparation is affected by task-relevance and refixation behavior. For task-relevant items only, we found longer fixation duration and higher SRP amplitudes for first fixations than for refixations over the occipital region and the opposite effect over the frontal region. Our findings provide first neurophysiological evidence that working memory loading of task-relevant information at fixation affects saccade planning.
眼动研究表明,在执行扫视之前,注意力会从当前注视位置转移到下一个位置。我们研究了注意力转移的代价是否取决于注视时的高阶加工,特别是取决于对任务相关项目的注视和重新注视之间的视觉工作记忆负荷差异。注意力转移反映在与扫视相关电位(SRP)的脑电图活动中。在一项涉及视觉搜索以及在干扰物中记忆多个目标的自由观看任务中,我们比较了对目标和干扰物的首次注视与重新注视时的SRP。目标的任务相关性意味着与干扰物(例如仅位置)相比,更多信息(例如身份和位置)将被加载到记忆中。首次注视比重新注视涉及更大的记忆负荷,因为首次注视涉及加载新项目,而重新注视涉及对先前访问项目的复述。从目标或干扰物处扫视前的间隔期内的SRP显示,扫视准备受任务相关性和重新注视行为的影响。仅对于任务相关项目,我们发现枕叶区域首次注视的注视持续时间更长且SRP波幅更高,而额叶区域则相反。我们的研究结果提供了首个神经生理学证据,即注视时任务相关信息的工作记忆负荷会影响扫视计划。