Localizing the neural substrate of reflexive covert orienting

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Abstract

The capture of covert spatial attention by salient visual events influences subsequent gaze behavior. A task irrelevant stimulus (cue) can reduce (Attention capture) or prolong (Inhi-bition of return) saccade reaction time to a subsequent target stimulus depending on the cue-target delay. Here we investigated the mechanisms that underlie the sensory-based account of AC/IOR by manipulating the visual processing stage where the cue and target interact. In Experiment 1, liquid crystal shutter goggles were used to test whether AC/IOR occur at a monocular versus binocular processing stage (before versus after signals from both eyes converge). In Experiment 2, we tested whether visual orientation selective mechanisms are critical for AC/IOR by using oriented "Gabor" stimuli. We found that the magnitude of AC and IOR was not different between monocular and interocular viewing conditions, or between iso-and ortho-oriented cue-target interactions. The results suggest that the visual mechanisms that contribute to AC/IOR arise at an orientation-independent binocular processing stage.

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APA

Higenell, V., Hwang, J. R., White, B. J., & Munoz, D. P. (2013). Localizing the neural substrate of reflexive covert orienting. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.16910/jemr.6.1.1

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