Weber H, Latanov A, Fischer B
Department of Neurophysiology, University of Freiburg, Germany.
Exp Brain Res. 1993;93(2):335-44. doi: 10.1007/BF00228403.
Saccadic reaction times and amplitudes were determined in four human subjects and two rhesus monkeys when they made saccades to visual targets appearing in different spatial or temporal contexts. Two stimuli were presented at different positions, either simultaneously (global condition) or in random order (range condition). Both the gap and the overlap paradigm were used. The characteristics of different groups of saccades defined by the separate peaks in the distribution of the saccadic reaction times as express and regular saccades, were analysed and compared. It is shown that, in man and monkey, the amplitudes of express saccades undergo the same or even stronger context-dependent changes as do those of regular saccades. Furthermore, the presence or absence of the fixation point also influences the saccadic amplitudes, at least for the express saccades. We conclude that the neural mechanisms that determine the amplitudes of the express saccades are more strictly under the control of the physical and physiological conditions of the stimulus situation, whereas regular saccades have greater--although not complete--dependence on the psychological context and, in particular, the subject's effort.
当四名人类受试者和两只恒河猴对出现在不同空间或时间背景下的视觉目标进行扫视时,测定了他们的扫视反应时间和幅度。在不同位置同时呈现两个刺激(全局条件)或按随机顺序呈现(范围条件)。间隙范式和重叠范式均被使用。分析并比较了由扫视反应时间分布中的单独峰值定义为快速扫视和常规扫视的不同扫视组的特征。结果表明,在人类和猴子中,快速扫视的幅度与常规扫视的幅度一样,甚至经历更强的上下文相关变化。此外,注视点的存在与否也会影响扫视幅度,至少对于快速扫视是这样。我们得出结论,决定快速扫视幅度的神经机制更严格地受刺激情境的物理和生理条件控制,而常规扫视对心理背景,特别是受试者的努力,有更大——尽管不是完全——的依赖性。