“Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations

Foerster RM (2018)
Vision Research 144: 29-37.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Forschungsgruppe
Learning to attend in sensorimotor task
Abstract / Bemerkung
Before acting humans saccade to a target object to extract relevant visual information. Even when acting on remembered objects, locations previously occupied by relevant objects are fixated during imagery and memory tasks – a phenomenon called “looking-at-nothing”. While looking-at-nothing was robustly found in tasks en- couraging declarative memory built-up, results are mixed in the case of procedural sensorimotor tasks. Eye- guidance to manual targets in complete darkness was observed in a task practiced for days beforehand, while investigations using only a single session did not find fixations to remembered action targets. Here, it is asked whether looking-at-nothing can be found in a single sensorimotor session and thus independent from sleep consolidation, and how it progresses when visual information is repeatedly unavailable. Eye movements were investigated in a computerized version of the trail making test. Participants clicked on numbered circles in ascending sequence. Fifty trials were performed with the same spatial arrangement of 9 visual targets to enable long-term memory consolidation. During 50 consecutive trials, participants had to click the remembered target sequence on an empty screen. Participants scanned the visual targets and also the empty target locations se- quentially with their eyes, however, the latter less precise than the former. Over the course of the memory trials, manual and oculomotor sequential target scanning became more similar to the visual trials. Results argue for robust looking-at-nothing during procedural sensorimotor tasks provided that long-term memory information is sufficien
Stichworte
Action control; Eye movements; Long-term memory; Looking-at-nothing; Trail making test; Visual attention
Erscheinungsjahr
2018
Zeitschriftentitel
Vision Research
Band
144
Seite(n)
29-37
ISSN
0042-6989
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2917877

Zitieren

Foerster RM. “Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations. Vision Research. 2018;144:29-37.
Foerster, R. M. (2018). “Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations. Vision Research, 144, 29-37. doi:10.1016/j.visres.2018.01.005
Foerster, Rebecca M. 2018. ““Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations”. Vision Research 144: 29-37.
Foerster, R. M. (2018). “Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations. Vision Research 144, 29-37.
Foerster, R.M., 2018. “Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations. Vision Research, 144, p 29-37.
R.M. Foerster, ““Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations”, Vision Research, vol. 144, 2018, pp. 29-37.
Foerster, R.M.: “Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations. Vision Research. 144, 29-37 (2018).
Foerster, Rebecca M. ““Looking-at-nothing” during sequential sensorimotor actions. Long-term memory-based eye scanning of remembered target locations”. Vision Research 144 (2018): 29-37.
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