2019
DOI: 10.3390/vision3020017
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Associations and Dissociations between Oculomotor Readiness and Covert Attention

Abstract: The idea that covert mental processes such as spatial attention are fundamentally dependent on systems that control overt movements of the eyes has had a profound influence on theoretical models of spatial attention. However, theories such as Klein’s Oculomotor Readiness Hypothesis (OMRH) and Rizzolatti’s Premotor Theory have not gone unchallenged. We previously argued that although OMRH/Premotor theory is inadequate to explain pre-saccadic attention and endogenous covert orienting, it may still be tenable as … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 119 publications
(168 reference statements)
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“…It therefore seems very unlikely that the impairment in feature search can be explained solely by differences in the sensory properties of the stimuli. These results are consistent with our previous observations of impaired covert feature search beyond the EOMR (Smith & Archibald, 2018;Smith et al, 2014, Experiment 1;Smith et al, 2010), and a number of studies demonstrating that exogenous covert orienting is impaired beyond the EOMR (Casteau & Smith 2019;Smith et al, 2010;Smith et al, 2014; although also see Hanning, Szinte, & Deubel, 2019). Together, these studies are evidence that placing a salient target beyond the range of eye movements reduces the efficiency with which it can reflexively summon attention.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…It therefore seems very unlikely that the impairment in feature search can be explained solely by differences in the sensory properties of the stimuli. These results are consistent with our previous observations of impaired covert feature search beyond the EOMR (Smith & Archibald, 2018;Smith et al, 2014, Experiment 1;Smith et al, 2010), and a number of studies demonstrating that exogenous covert orienting is impaired beyond the EOMR (Casteau & Smith 2019;Smith et al, 2010;Smith et al, 2014; although also see Hanning, Szinte, & Deubel, 2019). Together, these studies are evidence that placing a salient target beyond the range of eye movements reduces the efficiency with which it can reflexively summon attention.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Overall, these data suggest that feature search tasks which engage efficient 'preattentive' search processes are delayed when the target appears at locations that cannot be the goal of a saccadic eye movement, whereas conjunction search tasks which require inefficient, 'attentive' processes are unaffected. On first inspection, these findings are consistent with our previous findings that exogenous, covert orienting is constrained by the EOMR (Casteau & Smith 2019;Smith et al, 2014;Smith et al, 2010;, and the idea that reflexive attentional processes are tightly coupled with the oculomotor system, as predicted by oculomotor readiness theories of exogenous orienting (Casteau & Smith, 2019;. However, there are some caveats.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…With this manipulation, wherein cues and targets can be presented at locations that the eyes cannot reach, normal IOR and endogenous orienting were observed, but attention was not exogenously captured by peripheral cues. Although we are aware of one study with conflicting results [36], the discrepancy may be rooted in the difficulty of firm conclusions from the eye-abduction manipulation [37].…”
Section: Patient Studiesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Relative to goal-directed actions (manifested with behavioral responses), selective-set (as defined by Kahneman and Triesman [1]) is a mechanism of selective attention which underlies the ability of detecting task-relevant target information while ignoring (temporally simultaneous or separate) irrelevant information within a sequence of stimuli [1]. In many variations of the selective-set paradigm, generally associated with larger neuronal and significantly higher electrophysiological activity (see review in [36]) or eye-movement activity [37] concurrent to targets as compared to distractors.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%