Abstract

Already before the onset of a saccadic eye movement, we preferentially process visual information at the upcoming eye fixation. This 'presaccadic shift of attention' is typically assessed via localized test items, which potentially bias the attention measurement. Here we show how presaccadic attention shapes perception from saccade origin to target when no scene-structuring items are presented. Participants made saccades into a 1/f ('pink') noise field, in which we embedded a brief orientation signal at various locations shortly before saccade onset. Local orientation discrimination performance served as a proxy for the allocation of attention. Results demonstrate that (1) the presaccadic attention shift is accompanied by considerable attentional costs at the presaccadic eye fixation; (2) saccades are preceded by shifts of attention to their goal location even if they are directed into an unstructured visual field, but the spread of attention, compared to target-directed saccades, is broad; We conclude that the absence or presence of saccade target objects markedly shapes the distribution of presaccadic attention, and likely the underlying (space-based or object-based) cortical control mechanism. Our findings demonstrate the relevance of an item-free approach for measuring attentional dynamics across the visual field.

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