2013
DOI: 10.3758/s13414-013-0528-8
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Motor IOR revealed for reaching

Abstract: Inhibition of return (IOR) is a spatial phenomenon that is thought to promote visual search functions by biasing attention and eye movements toward novel locations. Considerable research suggests distinct sensory and motor flavors of IOR, but it is not clear whether the motor type can affect responses other than eye movements. Most studies claiming to reveal motor IOR in the reaching control system have been confounded by their use of peripheral signals, which can invoke sensory rather than motor-based inhibit… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The time course of the effect, often considered as a temporal indicator for the appearance of IOR, appears to derive from an interaction between the amount of IOR and the time course of the overlapping priming mechanism when cue and target appear at the same location and the CTOA is short. Despite the clear pattern of results in the present study, one has to admit that the conclusion does not necessarily also hold for directed movements such as saccades or manual pointing (Chica, Taylor, Lupi añez, & Klein, 2010;Cowper-Smith & Westwood, 2013;Satel & Wang, 2012).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 82%
“…The time course of the effect, often considered as a temporal indicator for the appearance of IOR, appears to derive from an interaction between the amount of IOR and the time course of the overlapping priming mechanism when cue and target appear at the same location and the CTOA is short. Despite the clear pattern of results in the present study, one has to admit that the conclusion does not necessarily also hold for directed movements such as saccades or manual pointing (Chica, Taylor, Lupi añez, & Klein, 2010;Cowper-Smith & Westwood, 2013;Satel & Wang, 2012).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 82%
“…Examples of the effect of IOR would be a delay in the execution of eye movements (e.g. Taylor & Klein, 2000), of reaching movements (Cowper-Smith & Westwood, 2013), or an increase in response threshold (Zhao, Heinke, Ivanoff, Klein, & Humphreys, 2011). However, this paper focuses on the long-standing debate, whether IOR is caused by attentional or perceptual mechanisms (see Klein, 2000;Berlucchi, 2006; for reviews).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spatial and temporal changes in eye movements observed in relation to previous sensory and/or motor events can provide insight into the underlying neural mechanisms associated with both perception and action. A common approach in this regard has been to elicit saccades to targets distributed about a point of central fixation which serves as the starting point for all trials and to which the gaze must return after each target-directed saccade (e.g., Taylor and Klein, 2000 ; Fecteau et al, 2004 ; Reuter et al, 2006 ; Cowper-Smith and Westwood, 2013 ; Cowper-Smith et al, 2013 ). However, it is possible that any effects observed while employing such methodology may be influenced (or even contingent upon) the task structure requiring the participant to return their gaze to a central fixation point, because of the predictability that it introduces.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%