Abstract

Small ballistic eye movements, so called microsaccades, occur even while foveating an object. Previous studies using covert attention tasks have shown that shortly after a symbolic spatial cue, specifying a behaviorally relevant location, microsaccades tend to be directed toward the cued location. This suggests that microsaccades can serve as an index for the covert orientation of spatial attention. However, this hypothesis faces two major challenges: First, effects associated with visual spatial attention are hard to distinguish from those that associated with the contemplation of foveating a peripheral stimulus. Second, it is less clear whether endogenously sustained attention alone can bias microsaccade directions without a spatial cue on each trial. To address the first issue, we investigated the direction of microsaccades in human subjects while they attended to a behaviorally relevant location and prepared a response eye movement either toward or away from this location. We find that directions of microsaccades are biased toward the attended location rather than towards the saccade target. To tackle the second issue, we verbally indicated the location to attend before the start of each block of trials, to exclude potential visual cue-specific effects on microsaccades. Our results indicate that sustained spatial attention alone reliably produces the microsaccade direction effect. Overall, our findings demonstrate that sustained spatial attention alone, even in the absence of saccade planning or a spatial cue, is sufficient to explain the direction bias observed in microsaccades.

Highlights

  • Microsaccades directly reflect an organism’s internal attentional state, rather than oculomotor responses to visual stimuli or byproducts of saccade intentions

  • To further isolate the microsaccade-directional modulation by sustained attention from confounds due to the visual stimulus used as a spatial cue, we conducted experiment 2, in which we tested the subjects with blocks of incongruent trials

  • While there have been multiple suggestions that microsaccades can serve as an overt indicator of covert spatial a­ ttention[6,7,8,13,14,18,19,20,21], others propose a dependency on other factors, such as complicated oculomotor response to visual s­ timuli[22,23,24,25,26,27,28]

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Summary

Introduction

Microsaccades directly reflect an organism’s internal attentional state, rather than oculomotor responses to visual stimuli or byproducts of saccade intentions. To investigate the attentional modulation of microsaccade directions, we designed a spatially guided match to sample task (Fig. 1A), in which subjects needed to wait until a remembered stimulus appears at one of two locations.

Results
Conclusion
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