Abstract

The completion of an antisaccade selectively increases the reaction time (RT) of a subsequent prosaccade: a result that has been interpreted to reflect the residual inhibition of stimulus-driven saccade networks [1], [2]. In the present investigation we sought to determine whether the increase in prosaccade RT is contingent on the constituent antisaccade planning processes of response suppression and vector inversion or is limited to response suppression. To that end, in one block participants alternated between pro- and antisaccades after every second trial (task-switching block), and in another block participants completed a series of prosaccades that were randomly (and infrequently) interspersed with no-go catch-trials (go/no-go block). Notably, such a design provides a framework for disentangling whether response suppression and/or vector inversion delays the planning of subsequent prosaccades. As expected, results for the task-switching block showed that antisaccades selectively increased the RTs of subsequent prosaccades. In turn, results for the go/no-go block showed that prosaccade RTs were increased when preceded by a no-go catch-trial. Moreover, the magnitude of the RT ‘cost’ was equivalent across the task-switching and go/no-go blocks. That prosaccades preceded by an antisaccade or a no-go catch-trial produced equivalent RT costs indicates that the conjoint processes of response suppression and vector inversion do not drive the inhibition of saccade planning mechanisms. Rather, the present findings indicate that a general consequence of response suppression is a residual inhibition of stimulus-driven saccade networks.

Highlights

  • The most frequent motor actions that humans make are saccades with direct stimulus-response compatibility

  • An extensive literature has shown that antisaccades produce longer reaction times (RT) [4,5], increased directional errors [4], and less accurate and more variable endpoints [6] than their prosaccade counterparts

  • To determine if alternating between pro- and antisaccades resulted in the unidirectional prosaccade switch-cost, RTs associated with the task-switching block were examined via 2, by 2 fully repeated measures ANOVA

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Summary

Introduction

The most frequent motor actions that humans make are saccades with direct stimulus-response compatibility (i.e., prosaccades). An extensive literature has shown that antisaccades produce longer reaction times (RT) [4,5], increased directional errors [4], and less accurate and more variable endpoints [6] than their prosaccade counterparts. These behavioural ‘costs’ have been attributed to a two-component process requiring: (1) the suppression of a stimulus-driven prosaccade (i.e., response suppression), and (2) the visual remapping of a target’s spatial properties to mirror-symmetrical space (i.e., vector inversion) [7]. Pre-setting serves as cortical-based inhibition of the baseline firing rates of saccade neurons

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