Abstract

Saccades let the visual scene sweep with high speed across the retina, thus producing a massive motion stimulus. Yet, in natural vision, we never perceive motion that is produced by saccades. The absence of perisaccadic motion perception might be caused by a transient reduction of visual sensitivity at the time of saccade initiation, so-called saccadic suppression. Saccade suppression occurs for contrast, displacement, and motion stimuli. Saccade suppression of displacements has been shown to be context sensitive. After performing saccades in sessions without perisaccadic stimulation, saccade suppression magnitude is drastically decreased (Zimmermann, 2020). Here, we aimed to test whether saccade suppression of contrast is similarly modulated by context. To this end, we projected stimuli on a homogeneously white wall such that we could establish a ganzfeld-like environment that, depending on the experimental session, did or did not contain any visible contrast stimuli. We first successfully replicated the context sensitivity of saccade suppression of displacements. Then, we tested context sensitivity of contrast suppression by asking subjects to perform several saccades either across the uniform white wall or across a background consisting of a sinusoidal grating. In contrast to perisaccadic context sensitivity for displacement suppression, we did not find context sensitivity for suppression of contrast.

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