Task constraints in visual working memory 论文

1998Vision Research引用 276
Gaze Tracking and Assistive TechnologyVisual perception and processing mechanismsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Vision Research
发表日期
1998-01-01
发表年份
1998

关键词

Gaze Tracking and Assistive TechnologyVisual perception and processing mechanismsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces

摘要

This paper examines the nature of visual representations that direct ongoing performance in sensorimotor tasks. Performance of such natural tasks requires relating visual information from different gaze positions. To explore this we used the technique of making task relevant display changes during saccadic eye movements. Subjects copied a pattern of colored blocks on a computer monitor, using the mouse to drag the blocks across the screen. Eye position was monitored using a dual-purkinje eye tracker, and the color of blocks in the pattern was changed at different points in task performance. When the target of the saccade changed color during the saccade, the duration of fixations on the model pattern increased, depending on the point in the task that the change was made. Thus different fixations on the same visual stimulus served a different purpose. The results also indicated that the visual information that is retained across successive fixations depends on moment by moment task demands. This is consistent with previous suggestions that visual representations are limited and task dependent. Changes in blocks in addition to the saccade target led to greater increases in fixation duration. This indicated that some global aspect of the pattern was retained across different fixations. Fixation durations revealed effects of the display changes that were not revealed in perceptual report. This can be understood by distinguishing between processes that operate at different levels of description and different time scales. Our conscious experience of the world may reflect events over a longer time scale than those underlying the substructure of the perceptuo-motor machinery.