Abstract

Perceptual stability is facilitated by a decrease in visual sensitivity during rapid eye movements, called saccadic suppression. While a large body of evidence demonstrates that saccadic programming is plastic, little is known about whether the perceptual consequences of saccades can be modified. Here, we demonstrate that saccadic suppression is attenuated during learning on a standard visual detection-in-noise task, to the point that it is effectively silenced. Across a period of 7 days, 44 participants were trained to detect brief, low-contrast stimuli embedded within dynamic noise, while eye position was tracked. Although instructed to fixate, participants regularly made small fixational saccades. Data were accumulated over a large number of trials, allowing us to assess changes in performance as a function of the temporal proximity of stimuli and saccades. This analysis revealed that improvements in sensitivity over the training period were accompanied by a systematic change in the impact of saccades on performance-robust saccadic suppression on day 1 declined gradually over subsequent days until its magnitude became indistinguishable from zero. This silencing of suppression was not explained by learning-related changes in saccade characteristics and generalized to an untrained retinal location and stimulus orientation. Suppression was restored when learned stimulus timing was perturbed, consistent with the operation of a mechanism that temporarily reduces or eliminates saccadic suppression, but only when it is behaviorally advantageous to do so. Our results indicate that learning can circumvent saccadic suppression to improve performance, without compromising its functional benefits in other viewing contexts.

Highlights

  • Perceptual stability is facilitated by a decrease in visual sensitivity during rapid eye movements, called saccadic suppression

  • While early researchers attributed the lack of awareness of intrasaccadic stimulation to a form of central anesthesia [6], it is most commonly associated with the phenomenon of saccadic suppression—a reduction in the visibility of brief flashes presented around the time of a saccade

  • Perceptual Learning Is Accompanied by a Reduction of Saccadic Suppression

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Summary

Introduction

Perceptual stability is facilitated by a decrease in visual sensitivity during rapid eye movements, called saccadic suppression. In contrast to the growing literature documenting different forms of oculomotor plasticity, far less is known about the extent to which the perceptual consequences of saccades can be modified This is partly due to ongoing debate over the relative contribution of active (extraretinal) and passive (masking) mechanisms to saccadic suppression, which has dominated much of the work in this area. People trained to detect brief visual patterns learn to turn off suppression around the expected time of the target These findings demonstrate an elegant form of plasticity, capable of improving the visibility of behaviorally relevant stimuli without compromising the wider functional benefits of suppression

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