Abstract

Voluntary gaze control allows people to direct their attention toward selected targets while avoiding distractors. Failure in this ability could be related to dysfunctions in the neural circuits underlying executive functions. Interestingly, recent evidence suggests that factors such as years of schooling and literacy may positively influence goal-directed behavior and inhibitory control. However, we do not yet know whether these factors also have a significant impact on the inhibitory control of oculomotor responses. Using pro- and antisaccadic tasks to assess the behavioral responses of healthy adults, we tested the contribution of years of schooling and reading proficiency to their oculomotor control, while simultaneously analyzing the effects of other individual characteristics related to demographic, cognitive and motor profiles. This approach allowed us to test the hypothesis that schooling factors are closely related to oculomotor performance. Indeed, a regression analysis revealed important contributions of reading speed and intellectual functioning to the choices on both pro- and antisaccadic tasks, while years of schooling, age and block sequence emerged as important predictors of the kinematic properties of eye movements on antisaccadic tasks. Thus, our findings show that years of schooling and reading speed had a strong predictive influence on the oculomotor measures, although age and order of presentation also influenced saccadic performance, as previously reported. Unexpectedly, we found that an indirect measure of intellectual ability also proved to be a good predictor of the control of saccadic movements. The methods and findings of this study will be useful for identifying and breaking down the cognitive and educational components involved in assessing voluntary and automatic responses.

Highlights

  • Deciding where to direct one’s gaze plays a crucial role in how people explore the complex world around them

  • Our hypothesis was that if saccadic eye movement control – antisaccadic task performance– is a measure of executive function, it would be related to education and reading proficiency, since schooling-related factors have been shown to affect executive control over behavioral tasks (OstroskySolis et al, 2004)

  • When applied to the saccadic choices, the regression analysis revealed an important relation to reading speed and years of schooling, as well as to Neuropsi scores and Intellectual Quotient (IQ)

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Summary

Introduction

Deciding where to direct one’s gaze plays a crucial role in how people explore the complex world around them. Antisaccadic tasks, in contrast, require subjects to avert their gaze from a target stimulus that appears on one side of the screen and direct it in the opposite direction, where there is no stimulus. This voluntary control of saccadic eye movements when performing antisaccadic tasks requires a kind of endogenous control (Munoz and Everling, 2004; Dafoe et al, 2007) that inhibits automatic or ‘inappropriate’ responses to visual inputs and reprograms alternative responses (Crevits and Vandierendock, 2005). Inhibitory control tasks are commonly used as a measure of the executive functions (i.e., those abilities necessary for purposeful, adaptive and self-directed behavior; Lezak et al, 2012)

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