Abstract
Subjects produced saccades to continuously visible targets that were signaled by the pitch, not the location, of an auditory signal. Such endogenous saccades were initiated more quickly when the visual fixation point disappeared 200 msec before the signal (thus producing a “gap”), even though the alerting benefits of such a warning were eliminated by an earlier warning tone. The presence of the gap effect under these circumstances shows that the effect is more general than was previously believed: Visual fixation point offsets facilitate saccades by affecting oculomotor processes related to both visually elicited (exogenous) and centrally produced (endogenous) saccades. In addition, the magnitude of the gap effect for endogenous saccades was significantly smaller than that for exogenous saccades, suggesting that at least some of the effect arises in relatively early processes, such as those involved in the processing of sensory signals, and not exclusively in later processes, such as those involved in the preparation and production of saccades.
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The research reported in this paper was supported by Grant R29-MH45145 from the National Institutes of Health.
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Abrams, R.A., Oonk, H.M. & Pratt, J. Fixation point offsets facilitate endogenous saccades. Perception & Psychophysics 60, 201–208 (1998). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03206029
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03206029