The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience

Brain's attention signal at upcoming eye movement spots predicts how long we look during free viewing of moving scenes

Updated

Abstract

Saliency at the saccade goal inversely correlated with fixation duration.

  • Higher visual saliency at the saccade target may lead to shorter fixation durations.
  • Motion and edge information were the strongest factors predicting fixation duration.
  • Neuronal responses in the superior colliculus (SC) showed an inverse relationship with how long fixations lasted.
  • Only SC neurons demonstrated increased activity for two quick fixations, indicating possible simultaneous saccade processing.
  • These findings could help explain how visual attention influences eye movement timing in everyday situations.

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