(2015)
Exploring attentional mechanisms in express saccade makers.
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Abstract
Express saccade makers (ESMs) produce high proportions (>30%) of low latency (80–130ms) express saccades (ES) in prosaccade overlap tasks. ESMs are much more frequent in Chinese compared to other populations (Amatya et al. 2012; Knox & Wolohan, 2013), allowing us to explore them in detail. ESM performance is stable over time (Knox & Wolohan, 2015) and their antisaccade performance is poor compared to non-ESMs (Knox et al. 2012), although this is not due to a deficit in oculomotor inhibitory control (Wolohan & Knox, 2014). We examined the performance of 18 ESMs and 46 nonESMs, classified by their performance on 200 prosaccade overlap trials, in a classic manual-responsecueing paradigm. Participants completed 300 trials in which an eccentric target appearance (left/right randomised) was preceded by a spatially nonpredictive peripheral cue (valid, invalid or neutral; cue SOA 100 150ms). While expected cueing effects were observed (valid<invalid and valid <neutral: p’s<0.05; neutral<invalid: p<0.05), there was no group difference (ESM vs nonESM; p=0.12). This suggests that the oculomotor behaviour of ESMs cannot be explained by differences in attentional orienting and/or disengagement.
Item Type: | Unspecified |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | saccade; express saccade; attention; culture; Chinese; cue |
Depositing User: | Symplectic Admin |
Date Deposited: | 31 Mar 2016 10:03 |
Last Modified: | 01 Sep 2022 13:07 |
Related URLs: | |
URI: | https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/2022422 |