2011
DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.2234-11.2011
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Saccadic Inhibition Reveals the Timing of Automatic and Voluntary Signals in the Human Brain

Abstract: Neurophysiological and phenomenological data on sensorimotor decision making are growing so rapidly that it is now necessary and achievable to capture it in biologically inspired models, for advancing our understanding in both research and clinical settings. However, the main impediment in moving from elegant models with few free parameters to more complex biological models in humans lies in constraining the more numerous parameters with behavioral data (without human single-cell recording). Here we show that … Show more

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Cited by 92 publications
(225 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
(107 reference statements)
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“…This is in line with the hypothesis that the nonoverlapping visual and goalrelated signals associated with this condition were mutually inhibitory ( Figure 1C), thereby suppressing baseline activation away from saccade threshold. This latter result is also consistent with human studies on the effect of remote distractors (McSorley, McCloy, & Lyne, 2012;Bompas & Sumner, 2011;Born & Kerzel, 2011;White, Gegenfurtner, & Kerzel, 2005;Walker, Deubel, Schneider, & Findlay, 1997).…”
Section: Srtsupporting
confidence: 90%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…This is in line with the hypothesis that the nonoverlapping visual and goalrelated signals associated with this condition were mutually inhibitory ( Figure 1C), thereby suppressing baseline activation away from saccade threshold. This latter result is also consistent with human studies on the effect of remote distractors (McSorley, McCloy, & Lyne, 2012;Bompas & Sumner, 2011;Born & Kerzel, 2011;White, Gegenfurtner, & Kerzel, 2005;Walker, Deubel, Schneider, & Findlay, 1997).…”
Section: Srtsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Neurophysiological support for this has been found in the FEFs (Purcell, Schall, Logan, & Palmeri, 2012; and the SC (Paré & Hanes, 2003; see also Basso & Wurtz, 1997). Computational models of the SCi have extended this idea by examining the spatial interaction between visual and goal-related signals within a dynamic competitive framework (Marino, Trappenberg, et al, 2012;Bompas & Sumner, 2011;Meeter et al, 2010;Godijn & Theeuwes, 2002;Trappenberg et al, 2001). An assumption underlying these models is that visual and goal-related signals mutually inhibit or excite one another depending on the spatial proximity of their corresponding population responses or "point images" (Marino, Rodgers, Levy, & Munoz, 2008;McIlwain, 1986); that is, the local population of neurons activated by a given stimulus (see Methods).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Eye movement data was processed following standard procedures (e.g., Bompas and Sumner, 2011). Briefly, accepted saccades were detected using a velocity criterion of greater than 35°/s, an acceleration of 6000°/s2 trials, and an amplitude of at least 6°(halfway to the target).…”
Section: Trial Analysis and Exclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Latency distributions from both saccades and manual responses on signal-present ignore trials were analysed for the presence, amplitude and delay of 'dips' time-locked to the onset of the signal following the procedure detailed in Bompas and Sumner (2011). In order to provide enough trials to generate good quality saccade latency distributions, data were pooled across all participants and statistical tests were not able to be conducted.…”
Section: Saccadic Inhibition Effect -Additional Analysis Of Potentialmentioning
confidence: 99%