Abstract

Attending a location in space facilitates responses to targets at that location when the time between cue and target is short. Certain types of exogenous cues – such as sudden peripheral onsets – have been described as reflexive and automatic. Recent studies however, have been showing many cases where exogenous cues are less automatic than previously believed and do not always result in facilitation. A lack of the behavioral facilitation, however, does not automatically necessitate a lack of underlying attention to that location. We test exogenous cueing in two experiments where facilitation is and is not likely to be observed with saccadic responses. We also test alternate measures linked to the allocation of attention such as saccadic curvature, microsaccades and pupil size. As expected, we find early facilitation as measured by saccadic reaction time when CTOAs are predictable but not when they are randomized within a block. We find no impact of the cue on microsaccade direction for either experiment, and only a slight dip in the frequency of microsaccades after the cue. We do find that change in pupil size to the cue predicts the magnitude of the validity effect, but only in the experiment where facilitation was observed. In both experiments, we observed a tendency for saccadic curvature to deviate away from the cued location and this was stronger for early CTOAs and toward vertical targets. Overall, we find that only change in pupil size is consistent with observed facilitation. Saccadic curvature is influenced by the onset of the cue, buts its direction is indicative of oculomotor inhibition whether we see RT facilitation or not. Microsaccades were not diagnostic in either experiment. Finally, we see little to no evidence of attention at the cued location in any additional measures when facilitation of saccadic responses is absent.

Highlights

  • Selective attention allows our visual system to preferentially process some information over others

  • There was a main effect of validity (χ2 (1) = 29, p < 0.001) with valid trials being faster than invalid (−19.6 ms, SE 3.4 ms) at the base of 50 ms cue-target onset asynchronies (CTOAs), and this was qualified by a validity x CTOA interaction (χ2 (2) = 90, p < 0.001) with valid trials slowing (+8.4 ms SRT/100 ms CTOA, SE 1.1 ms) (Fig. 2b)

  • This SRT advantage was absent by 250 ms CTOA and became a cost at later CTOAs (450+) reflecting inhibition of return (IOR) at the cued location

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Summary

Introduction

Selective attention allows our visual system to preferentially process some information over others. The facilitatory effect can be explained as an orientation of attention towards the cued location and improving further processing of the following target onset. Danziger and Kingstone[31] for example, observe IOR within 50 ms at the cued location and Maruff et al.[32] observed facilitation at short CTOAs but only if the cue and target overlapped temporally. Out of the three experiment conditions, only one showed typical cueing effects while the others showed insignificant or zero facilitation at short CTOAs. Pratt, Sekuler and McAuliffe[34] suggested an influence of attentional set on early facilitation. MacInnes[36] tested the spatial and temporal gradient of IOR with continuous random CTOAs and found no early facilitation for either manual or saccadic responses. The trajectories of saccades deviating away from an attended location has been consistently seen in studies, but this effect does not translate to hand movements[41]

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