Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity

Microsaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when subjects make predictions about upcoming events. To evaluate whether contextual...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gerardo Fernández, Nora P. Rotstein, Luis E. Politi, Liliana Castro, Osvaldo Agamennoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IMR (Innovative Medical Research) Press Limited 2018-08-01
Series:Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jin.imrpress.com/fileup/1757-448X/PDF/1545985330942-1072998104.pdf
id doaj-9446bd1d844c4f59ad32f93116f36779
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9446bd1d844c4f59ad32f93116f367792020-11-25T03:06:11ZengIMR (Innovative Medical Research) Press LimitedJournal of Integrative Neuroscience1757-448X2018-08-0117328729010.31083/JIN-170057Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activityGerardo Fernández, Nora P. Rotstein, Luis E. Politi, Liliana Castro, Osvaldo AgamennoniMicrosaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when subjects make predictions about upcoming events. To evaluate whether contextual predictability might change microsaccadic behavior, microsaccades were evaluated for twenty-one subjects when reading 40 regular sentences and 40 proverbs. Maxjump was defined as the word with the largest difference between the cloze predictability of two consecutive words. Analysis of microsaccades while reading proverbs and regular sentences revealed that microsaccadic rate on words before Maxjump, during Maxjump and words after Maxjump varied depending on the kind of sentence and on the word predictability. Words of low and high predictability required either less or more microsaccades to previous words, during and on Maxjump, depending upon the semantic context and a readers' predictions of upcoming words. The present study demonstrates that the rate of microsaccades showed significant differences for reading either proverbs or regular sentences. Hence, evaluation of microsaccades while reading sentences with different contextual predictability may provide information concerning specific effects of cue attention during a complex task.https://jin.imrpress.com/fileup/1757-448X/PDF/1545985330942-1072998104.pdf|microsaccade|reading|proverbs|attentional cue|predictions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gerardo Fernández, Nora P. Rotstein, Luis E. Politi, Liliana Castro, Osvaldo Agamennoni
spellingShingle Gerardo Fernández, Nora P. Rotstein, Luis E. Politi, Liliana Castro, Osvaldo Agamennoni
Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
|microsaccade|reading|proverbs|attentional cue|predictions
author_facet Gerardo Fernández, Nora P. Rotstein, Luis E. Politi, Liliana Castro, Osvaldo Agamennoni
author_sort Gerardo Fernández, Nora P. Rotstein, Luis E. Politi, Liliana Castro, Osvaldo Agamennoni
title Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
title_short Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
title_full Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
title_fullStr Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
title_full_unstemmed Microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
title_sort microsaccadic behavior when developing a complex dynamical activity
publisher IMR (Innovative Medical Research) Press Limited
series Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
issn 1757-448X
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Microsaccades are sensitive to changes of perceptual inputs as well as modulations of cognitive states. There are just a few works analyzing microsaccades while subjects are processing complex information and fewer when subjects make predictions about upcoming events. To evaluate whether contextual predictability might change microsaccadic behavior, microsaccades were evaluated for twenty-one subjects when reading 40 regular sentences and 40 proverbs. Maxjump was defined as the word with the largest difference between the cloze predictability of two consecutive words. Analysis of microsaccades while reading proverbs and regular sentences revealed that microsaccadic rate on words before Maxjump, during Maxjump and words after Maxjump varied depending on the kind of sentence and on the word predictability. Words of low and high predictability required either less or more microsaccades to previous words, during and on Maxjump, depending upon the semantic context and a readers' predictions of upcoming words. The present study demonstrates that the rate of microsaccades showed significant differences for reading either proverbs or regular sentences. Hence, evaluation of microsaccades while reading sentences with different contextual predictability may provide information concerning specific effects of cue attention during a complex task.
topic |microsaccade|reading|proverbs|attentional cue|predictions
url https://jin.imrpress.com/fileup/1757-448X/PDF/1545985330942-1072998104.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT gerardofernandeznoraprotsteinluisepolitililianacastroosvaldoagamennoni microsaccadicbehaviorwhendevelopingacomplexdynamicalactivity
_version_ 1724674794655318016