Establishing object correspondence across eye movements: Flexible use of spatiotemporal and surface feature information |
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Authors: | Richard Ashleigh M Luck Steven J Hollingworth Andrew |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Psychology, The University of Iowa, 11 Seashore Hall E, Iowa City, IA, 52242-1407, USA b Center for Mind & Brain and Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis, USA |
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Abstract: | Visual input is frequently disrupted by eye movements, blinks, and occlusion. The visual system must be able to establish correspondence between objects visible before and after a disruption. Current theories hold that correspondence is established solely on the basis of spatiotemporal information, with no contribution from surface features. In five experiments, we tested the relative contributions of spatiotemporal and surface feature information in establishing object correspondence across saccades. Participants generated a saccade to one of two objects, and the objects were shifted during the saccade so that the eyes landed between them, requiring a corrective saccade to fixate the target. To correct gaze to the appropriate object, correspondence must be established between the remembered saccade target and the target visible after the saccade. Target position and surface feature consistency were manipulated. Contrary to existing theories, surface features and spatiotemporal information both contributed to object correspondence, and the relative weighting of the two sources of information was governed by the demands of the task. These data argue against a special role for spatiotemporal information in object correspondence, indicating instead that the visual system can flexibly use multiple sources of relevant information. |
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Keywords: | Eye movements Object perception Visual memory Visual short-term memory |
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