Looking away: distractor influences on saccadic trajectory and endpoint in prosaccade and antisaccade tasks

Exp Brain Res. 2016 Jun;234(6):1637-48. doi: 10.1007/s00221-016-4551-6. Epub 2016 Feb 2.

Abstract

Successful target selection often occurs concurrently with distractor inhibition. A better understanding of the former thus requires a thorough study of the competition that arises between target and distractor representations. In the present study, we explore whether the presence of a distractor influences saccade processing via interfering with visual target and/or saccade goal representations. To do this, we asked participants to make either pro- or antisaccade eye movements to a target and measured the change in their saccade trajectory and landing position (collectively referred to as deviation) in response to distractors placed near or far from the saccade goal. The use of an antisaccade paradigm may help to distinguish between stimulus- and goal-related distractor interference, as unlike with prosaccades, these two features are dissociated in space when making a goal-directed antisaccade response away from a visual target stimulus. The present results demonstrate that for both pro- and antisaccades, distractors near the saccade goal elicited the strongest competition, as indicated by greater saccade trajectory deviation and landing position error. Though distractors far from the saccade goal elicited, on average, greater deviation away in antisaccades than in prosaccades, a time-course analysis revealed a significant effect of far-from-goal distractors in prosaccades as well. Considered together, the present findings support the view that goal-related representations most strongly influence the saccade metrics tested, though stimulus-related representations may play a smaller role in determining distractor-based interference effects on saccade execution under certain circumstances. Further, the results highlight the advantage of considering temporal changes in distractor-based interference.

Keywords: Antisaccades; Attention; Distractor inhibition; Eye movements; Saccade trajectory.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Attention / physiology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Inhibition, Psychological*
  • Male
  • Saccades / physiology*
  • Visual Perception / physiology*
  • Young Adult