Saccade latency and warning signals: Effects of auditory and visual stimulus onset and offset |
| |
Authors: | Susan M. Ross Leonard E. Ross |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Psychology Department, University of Wisconsin, 53706, Madison, Wisconsin
|
| |
Abstract: | Previous studies have found that a nonspecific visual event occurring at the fovea 50–150 msec after the onset of a peripheral target delayed the initiation of the saccade to that target. The present studies replicated and extended this finding by studying the effects of both visual and auditory warning signals, by examining the effects of onset and offset warning on manual response latency, and by investigating the effects of presenting the warning events in the periphery of the visual field. The results indicated that the interfering effects occur with visual but not auditory stimuli, with saccades but not motor responses, and when the visual warning event occurs either foveally or in the subject’s periphery. Implications for the processes involved are discussed. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|