Journal of Eye Movement Research (Mar 2014)

Visual vs. Spatial Contributions to Microsaccades and Visual-Spatial Working Memory

  • Joshua T. Gaunt,
  • Bruce Bridgeman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.16910/jemr.7.2.2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2

Abstract

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Microsaccade rates and directions were monitored while observers performed a visual working memory task at varying retinal eccentricities. We show that microsaccades generate no interference in a working memory task, indicating that spatial working memory is at least partially insulated from oculomotor activity. Intervening tasks during the memory interval affected microsaccade patterns; microsaccade frequency was consistently higher during concurrent spatial tapping (no visual component) than during exposure to dynamic visual noise (no task). Average microsaccade rate peaked after appearance of a fixation cross at the start of a trial, and dipped at cue onset and offset, consistent with previous results. Direction of stimuli in choice tasks did not influence microsaccade direction,however.

Keywords