Abstract

This study examined how variations in the visual scene affect the generation of bimodal saccadic latency distributions, the first mode of which is called the population of “express saccades”. The surface media used to make stimuli visible and the composition of the background were varied to determine the conditions under which express saccades can be generated in rhesus monkeys. The results show that express saccades to singly presented targets can readily be elicited when the stimuli are made visible by virtue of either luminance contrast, color contrast or motion cues. Express saccades are rarely obtained when stimuli are made visible by virtue of only stereoscopic depth or texture cues. Express saccades can, however, be elicited using random-dot stereograms or textures when luminance or chrominance information is added to the target. When single target stimuli are presented simultaneously with a set of non-target stimuli, express saccades are for the most part prevented unless either the non-target stimuli are near threshold or their numerosity is very high, in which case they form a texture-like array. However, when the non-target stimuli are continuously present in the display, express saccades reemerge. These findings suggest that express saccades are not unique to experimental situations in which only a single stimulus appears on an otherwise homogeneous surface; they can readily be generated as long as the target stimulus is made visible by virtue of luminance, chrominance, motion or a combination of more than one surface medium and as long as the target does not appear concurrently with a salient group of other non-target stimuli.

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