Post-saccadic changes disrupt attended pre-saccadic object memory.


Journal

Journal of vision
ISSN: 1534-7362
Titre abrégé: J Vis
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101147197

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
02 08 2021
Historique:
entrez: 4 8 2021
pubmed: 5 8 2021
medline: 25 11 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Trans-saccadic memory consists of keeping track of objects' locations and features across saccades; pre-saccadic information is remembered and compared with post-saccadic information. It has been shown to have limited resources and involve attention with respect to the selection of objects and features. In support, a previous study showed that recognition of distinct post-saccadic objects in the visual scene is impaired when pre-saccadic objects are relevant and thus already encoded in memory (Poth, Herwig, Schneider, 2015). Here, we investigated the inverse (i.e. how the memory of pre-saccadic objects is affected by abrupt but irrelevant changes in the post-saccadic visual scene). We also modulated the amount of attention to the relevant pre-saccadic object by having participants either make a saccade to it or elsewhere and observed that pre-saccadic attentional facilitation affected how much post-saccadic changes disrupted trans-saccadic memory of pre-saccadic objects. Participants identified a flashed symbol (d, b, p, or q, among distracters), at one of six placeholders (figures "8") arranged in circle around fixation while planning a saccade to one of them. They reported the identity of the symbol after the saccade. We changed the post-saccadic scene in Experiment one by removing the entire scene, only the placeholder where the pre-saccadic symbol was presented, or all other placeholders except this one. We observed reduced identification performance when only the saccade-target placeholder disappeared after the saccade. In Experiment two, we changed one placeholder location (inward/outward shift or rotation re. saccade vector) after the saccade and observed that identification performance decreased with increased shift/rotation of the saccade-target placeholder. We conclude that pre-saccadic memory is disrupted by abrupt attention-capturing post-saccadic changes of visual scene, particularly when these changes involve the object prioritized by being the goal of a saccade. These findings support the notion that limited trans-saccadic memory resources are disrupted when object correspondence at saccadic goal is broken through removal or location change.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34347017
pii: 2776547
doi: 10.1167/jov.21.8.8
pmc: PMC8340665
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

8

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Auteurs

Anne-Sophie Laurin (AS)

University of Montreal, Department of Psychology, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
anne-sophie.laurin@umontreal.ca.

Maxime Bleau (M)

University of Montreal, School of Optometry, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
maxime.bleau.1@umontreal.ca.

Jessica Gedjakouchian (J)

University of Montreal, School of Optometry, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Romain Fournet (R)

University of Montreal, School of Optometry, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
romain-fournet@hotmail.fr.

Laure Pisella (L)

ImpAct, INSERM UM1028, CNRS UMR 5292, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Lyon, France.
laure.pisella@inserm.fr.

Aarlenne Zein Khan (AZ)

University of Montreal, School of Optometry, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
aarlennek@gmail.com.

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