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Volume 3, Number 9,
Abstract 183, Page 183a |
doi:10.1167/3.9.183 |
http://journalofvision.org/3/9/183/ |
ISSN
1534-7362 |
Detecting patterns of covert attention shifts in
psychophysical tasks using microsaccades
Ziad M Hafed |
Center for Intelligent Machines,
McGill University, Canada |
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James J Clark |
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Abstract
When a person’s gaze is fixed, his attention
can shift covertly about the visual field. In a recent paper (Hafed
and Clark, 2002), we proposed a direct measure of covert attention,
one based on the detection and analysis of microsaccades. Here we
show how this measure can allow us to uncover new patterns of covert
attention shifts that are unobservable using current approaches. We
ran a simple task in which trials consisted of the onset of a
peripheral stimulus 17 deg to the right or left of fixation followed
by a foveal stimulus. All stimuli were 2.5 deg in size, and their
colors were red, yellow, green, or blue. The stimulus onset
asynchrony between the peripheral and foveal stimuli was randomly
chosen from among 0, 50, 100, 150, & 500 ms. Subjects were
instructed to maintain fixation and to make speeded same/different
judgments on the colors of the peripheral and foveal stimuli. Eye
movements were monitored, and microsaccade detection and analysis
were as in (Hafed & Clark, 2002). We observed the occurrence of
three epochs of ‘microsaccadic responses’ (and therefore of
‘attention shifts’) in our task: one related to peripheral events,
one related to foveal events, and one related to response execution.
In particular, microsaccade analysis revealed attention shifts to
the peripheral stimulus and back after this stimulus’ onset,
followed by attention shifts to the peripheral stimulus and back
after the foveal stimulus’ onset, followed finally by an attention
shift to the peripheral stimulus that was tightly synchronized with
manual response execution. This final shift is hard to uncover using
current approaches. We conclude that the accessibility to covert
attention shifts that microsaccade analysis allows has tremendous
implications on the study of how humans employ covert attention when
interacting with their visual environment.
Hafed, Z. M. & Clark, J. J. Microsaccades
as an overt measure of covert attention shifts. Vision Research,
Vol. 42, 2533-2545.
History
Received August 22, 2003; published October
22, 2003 Citation
Hafed, Z. M., & Clark, J. J. (2003).
Detecting patterns of covert attention shifts in psychophysical
tasks using microsaccades [Abstract]. Journal of Vision,
3(9), 183a, http://journalofvision.org/3/9/183/,
doi:10.1167/3.9.183. Keywords
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