PERIPHERAL STIMULUS LOCALIZATION BY INFANTS WITH EYE AND HEAD MOVEMENTS DURING VISUAL-ATTENTION

Citation
Je. Richards et Sk. Hunter, PERIPHERAL STIMULUS LOCALIZATION BY INFANTS WITH EYE AND HEAD MOVEMENTS DURING VISUAL-ATTENTION, Vision research, 37(21), 1997, pp. 3021-3035
Citations number
64
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,Ophthalmology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00426989
Volume
37
Issue
21
Year of publication
1997
Pages
3021 - 3035
Database
ISI
SICI code
0042-6989(1997)37:21<3021:PSLBIW>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
The effect of attention to a focal stimulus on 14, 20 and 26-week-old infant's peripheral stimulus localization with eye and head movements was examined in this study, Fixation was engaged on a stimulus in the central visual field and a stimulus was presented in the periphery imm ediately or after a delay. Peripheral stimulus localization occurred l ess frequently near the beginning of fixation and when a significant h eart rate deceleration had occurred (sustained attention), compared wi th when no focal stimulus was present or after heart rate had returned to prestimulus level (attention termination), Localization was accomp anied by head movements on more than two-thirds of the trials, and the likelihood of head movements was positively associated with stimulus eccentricity. The saccades to localize the peripheral stimulus had unu sually high velocities in the attention conditions for the two older a ged groups relative to their saccades in inattentive conditions, There were unusual ''localizing head movements'' in the attention condition s in the absence of localizing saccades or changes in fixation for the two older age groups. Infant attention modulates eye movement charact eristics of infants, These data also support the hypothesis that eye a nd head movement systems are relatively independent in the infant, and that eye-head relations during infant attention may be different from during inattention. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.