Saccades operate in violation of Hick's law.

Exp Brain Res

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA.

Published: October 2002

Hick's law states that response times (RTs) increase in proportion to the logarithm of the number of potential stimulus-response (S-R) alternatives. We hypothesized that time-consuming processes associated with response selection contribute significantly to this effect. We also hypothesized that the latency of saccades might not conform to Hick's law since visually guided saccades can be automatically selected using topographically organized pathways that convert spatially coded visual activity into spatially coded motor commands. We evaluated these hypotheses by examining three response modalities for their compliance with Hick's law: saccades directed to a visual target (prosaccades), saccades directed away from the target (antisaccades) and manual responses in which each digit was associated with a specific target location (key-press responses). Both antisaccades and key-press responses conformed to Hick's law but saccade latencies were completely unaffected by S-R uncertainty. The significance of these findings is considered in terms of the processes of response selection and premotor programming.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-002-1168-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hick's law
20
response selection
8
spatially coded
8
saccades directed
8
key-press responses
8
saccades
5
hick's
5
law
5
saccades operate
4
operate violation
4

Similar Publications

Being able to correctly identify a target when presented with multiple possible alternatives, or increasing uncertainty, is highly beneficial in a wide variety of situations. This has been intensely investigated with human participants and results consistently demonstrated that participant reaction time (RT) increases linearly with the number of response alternatives, described as Hick's Law. Yet, the strength of this relationship is impacted by a variety of parameters, including stimulus-response compatibility, stimulus intensity, and practice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The oculomotor signature of expected surprise.

Sci Rep

February 2022

Institute of Neurosciences (IONS), Cognition and System (COSY), Université catholique de Louvain, 53 av Mounier, B1.53.04 COSY, 1200, Brussels, Belgium.

Expected surprise, defined as the anticipation of uncertainty associated with the occurrence of a future event, plays a major role in gaze shifting and spatial attention. In the present study, we analyzed its impact on oculomotor behavior. We hypothesized that the occurrence of anticipatory saccades could decrease with increasing expected surprise and that its influence on visually-guided responses could be different given the presence of sensory information and perhaps competitive attentional effects.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hick's law equivalent for reaction time to individual stimuli.

Br J Math Stat Psychol

July 2021

Department of Mechanical Engineering and Department of Industrial & Systems Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Hick's law, one of the few law-like relationships involving human performance, expresses choice reaction time as a linear function of the mutual information between the stimulus and response events. However, since this law was first proposed in 1952, its validity has been challenged by the fact that it only holds for the overall reaction time (RT) across all the stimuli, and does not hold for the reaction time (RT ) for each individual stimulus. This paper introduces a new formulation in which RT is a linear function of (1) the mutual information between the event that stimulus i occurs and the set of all potential response events and (2) the overall mutual information for all stimuli and responses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Impairments in processing speed under conditions of increasing cognitive load have been reported in individuals with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). In other conditions that are also associated with white matter disruption, both psychological distress and fatigue have been shown to underlie this impairment.

Objective: the current study aimed to investigate whether slowing of processing abilities under conditions of greater cognitive load is independent of fatigue and psychological status in premorbidly healthy individuals with subacute mTBI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An elemental computation in the brain is to identify the best in a set of options and report its value. It is required for inference, decision-making, optimization, action selection, consensus, and foraging. Neural computing is considered powerful because of its parallelism; however, it is unclear whether neurons can perform this max-finding operation in a way that improves upon the prohibitively slow optimal serial max-finding computation (which takes [Formula: see text] time for N noisy candidate options) by a factor of N, the benchmark for parallel computation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!