Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Van der Boechorststraat 7, 1081BT, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Hills Building 2.20 Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2022 Aug;29(4):1327-1337. doi: 10.3758/s13423-022-02091-3. Epub 2022 Apr 4.
Human vision involves selectively directing the eyes to potential objects of interest. According to most prominent theories, selection is the quantal outcome of an ongoing competition between saliency-driven signals on the one hand, and relevance-driven signals on the other, with both types of signals continuously and concurrently projecting onto a common priority map. Here, we challenge this view. We asked participants to make a speeded eye movement towards a target orientation, which was presented together with a non-target of opposing tilt. In addition to the difference in relevance, the target and non-target also differed in saliency, with the target being either more or less salient than the non-target. We demonstrate that saliency- and relevance-driven eye movements have highly idiosyncratic temporal profiles, with saliency-driven eye movements occurring rapidly after display onset while relevance-driven eye movements occur only later. Remarkably, these types of eye movements can be fully separated in time: We find that around 250 ms after display onset, eye movements are no longer driven by saliency differences between potential targets, but also not yet driven by relevance information, resulting in a period of non-selectivity, which we refer to as the attentional limbo. Binomial modeling further confirmed that visual selection is not necessarily the outcome of a direct battle between saliency- and relevance-driven signals. Instead, selection reflects the dynamic changes in the underlying saliency- and relevance-driven processes themselves, and the time at which an action is initiated then determines which of the two will emerge as the driving force of behavior.
人类视觉涉及有选择性地将眼睛引导至潜在的感兴趣物体上。根据大多数突出的理论,选择是突显驱动信号和相关性驱动信号之间持续竞争的量子结果,这两种类型的信号不断且同时投射到共同的优先级映射上。在这里,我们挑战了这一观点。我们要求参与者朝着目标方向快速进行眼动,目标与相反倾斜的非目标一起呈现。除了相关性的差异外,目标和非目标在突显度上也有所不同,目标比非目标更突出或不那么突出。我们证明,突显驱动和相关性驱动的眼球运动具有高度独特的时间特征,突显驱动的眼球运动在显示开始后迅速发生,而相关性驱动的眼球运动仅在稍后发生。值得注意的是,这两种类型的眼球运动可以在时间上完全分离:我们发现,在显示开始后约 250 毫秒,眼球运动不再受潜在目标之间的突显差异驱动,也尚未受相关性信息驱动,导致了一个非选择性时期,我们称之为注意的混沌。二项式建模进一步证实,视觉选择不一定是突显驱动和相关性驱动信号之间直接竞争的结果。相反,选择反映了潜在的突显驱动和相关性驱动过程本身的动态变化,而动作启动的时间决定了这两个过程中的哪一个将成为行为的驱动力。