Breaking Object Correspondence Across Saccadic Eye Movements Deteriorates Object Recognition.

Front Syst Neurosci

Neuro-Cognitive Psychology, Department of Psychology, Bielefeld UniversityBielefeld, Germany; Cluster of Excellence Cognitive Interaction Technology, Bielefeld UniversityBielefeld, Germany.

Published: January 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Visual perception operates through eye fixations and quick movements (saccades), where information about relevant objects is linked between these events.
  • When a saccade occurs, the information about the object before the movement often gets updated with new postsaccadic information, leading to the loss of the presaccadic representation unless object correspondence is disrupted.
  • Experiments showed that breaking this correspondence—either through a brief blank screen or changing the object's contrast—improved displacement recognition but hurt the ability to identify the letter associated with the object, highlighting the importance of maintaining object correspondence for effective visual recognition.

Article Abstract

Visual perception is based on information processing during periods of eye fixations that are interrupted by fast saccadic eye movements. The ability to sample and relate information on task-relevant objects across fixations implies that correspondence between presaccadic and postsaccadic objects is established. Postsaccadic object information usually updates and overwrites information on the corresponding presaccadic object. The presaccadic object representation is then lost. In contrast, the presaccadic object is conserved when object correspondence is broken. This helps transsaccadic memory but it may impose attentional costs on object recognition. Therefore, we investigated how breaking object correspondence across the saccade affects postsaccadic object recognition. In Experiment 1, object correspondence was broken by a brief postsaccadic blank screen. Observers made a saccade to a peripheral object which was displaced during the saccade. This object reappeared either immediately after the saccade or after the blank screen. Within the postsaccadic object, a letter was briefly presented (terminated by a mask). Observers reported displacement direction and letter identity in different blocks. Breaking object correspondence by blanking improved displacement identification but deteriorated postsaccadic letter recognition. In Experiment 2, object correspondence was broken by changing the object's contrast-polarity. There were no object displacements and observers only reported letter identity. Again, breaking object correspondence deteriorated postsaccadic letter recognition. These findings identify transsaccadic object correspondence as a key determinant of object recognition across the saccade. This is in line with the recent hypothesis that breaking object correspondence results in separate representations of presaccadic and postsaccadic objects which then compete for limited attentional processing resources (Schneider, 2013). Postsaccadic object recognition is then deteriorated because less resources are available for processing postsaccadic objects.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4685059PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2015.00176DOI Listing

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