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Presaccadic attention allocation and express saccades

D Cavegn1, G d'Ydewalle

  • 1Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, University of Leuven, Belgium. cavegn@psy.unibe.ch

Psychological Research
|January 1, 1996
PubMed
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Disengagement of visual attention is necessary for express saccades, which are rapid eye movements. Experiments show cues facilitate these rapid eye movements, supporting a separate fixation system hypothesis.

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Ophthalmology

Background:

  • Express saccades are visually-guided eye movements with very short latencies (~100 ms).
  • Understanding the mechanisms behind express saccade generation is crucial for cognitive neuroscience.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To test the hypothesis that disengaging visual attention is a prerequisite for generating express saccades.
  • To investigate the role of attention and fixation systems in rapid eye movement control.

Main Methods:

  • Experiments utilized the gap and overlap paradigms to manipulate fixation stimulus duration.
  • Peripheral and central location cues were employed to direct visual attention.
  • Saccade latency and accuracy were measured under various experimental conditions.

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Main Results:

  • Express saccades were frequently produced in the gap paradigm but not the overlap paradigm.
  • Location cues facilitated, rather than abolished, express saccade generation.
  • Facilitation of express saccades occurred even when the fixation stimulus was not removed.

Conclusions:

  • The findings support a model where disengagement from a separate fixation system is necessary for express saccade generation.
  • This conclusion aligns with current neurobiological evidence on attention and eye movement control.