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Saccade latency indexes exogenous and endogenous object-based attention

Classic studies of object-based attention have utilized keypress responses as the main dependent measure. However, people typically make saccades to fixate important objects. Recent work has shown that attention may act differently when it is deployed covertly versus in advance of a saccade. We furt...

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Published in:Attention, perception & psychophysics perception & psychophysics, 2016-10, Vol.78 (7), p.1998-2013
Main Authors: Şentürk, Gözde, Greenberg, Adam S., Liu, Taosheng
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container_end_page 2013
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1998
container_title Attention, perception & psychophysics
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creator Şentürk, Gözde
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Liu, Taosheng
description Classic studies of object-based attention have utilized keypress responses as the main dependent measure. However, people typically make saccades to fixate important objects. Recent work has shown that attention may act differently when it is deployed covertly versus in advance of a saccade. We further investigated the link between saccades and attention by examining whether object-based effects can be observed for saccades. We adapted the classical double-rectangle cueing paradigm of Egly, Driver, and Rafal ( 1994 ), and measured both the first saccade latency and the keypress reaction time (RT) to a target that appeared at the end of one of the two rectangles. Our results showed that saccade latencies exhibited higher sensitivity than did RTs for detecting effects of attention. We also assessed the generality of the attention effects by testing three types of cues: hybrid (predictive and peripheral), exogenous (nonpredictive and peripheral), and endogenous (predictive and central). We found that both RTs and saccade latencies exhibited effects of both space-based and object-based attentional selection. However, saccade latencies showed a more robust attentional modulation than RTs. For the exogenous cues, we observed a spatial inhibition of return along with an object-based effect, implying that object-based attention is independent of space-based attention. Overall, our results revealed an oculomotor correlate of object-based attention, suggesting that, in addition to spatial priority, object-level priority also affects saccade planning.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Anatomy
Attention
Attention - physiology
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Cognitive Psychology
Cues
Eye movements
Humans
Motor Reactions
Psychology
Reaction Time
Reaction Time - physiology
Saccades - physiology
Sensory perception
Space Perception - physiology
Stimuli
Studies
Visual Perception - physiology
Visual task performance
Young Adult
title Saccade latency indexes exogenous and endogenous object-based attention
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