• Title of article

    Horizontal saccadic eye movements enhance the retrieval of landmark shape and location information

  • Author/Authors

    Brunyé، نويسنده , , Tad T. and Mahoney، نويسنده , , Caroline R. and Augustyn، نويسنده , , Jason S. and Taylor، نويسنده , , Holly A.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    279
  • To page
    288
  • Abstract
    Recent work has demonstrated that horizontal saccadic eye movements enhance verbal episodic memory retrieval, particularly in strongly right-handed individuals. The present experiments test three primary assumptions derived from this research. First, horizontal eye movements should facilitate episodic memory for both verbal and non-verbal information. Second, the benefits of horizontal eye movements should only be seen when they immediately precede tasks that demand right and left-hemisphere processing towards successful performance. Third, the benefits of horizontal eye movements should be most pronounced in the strongly right-handed. Two experiments confirmed these hypotheses: horizontal eye movements increased recognition sensitivity and decreased response times during a spatial memory test relative to both vertical eye movements and fixation. These effects were only seen when horizontal eye movements preceded episodic memory retrieval, and not when they preceded encoding (Experiment 1). Further, when eye movements preceded retrieval, they were only beneficial with recognition tests demanding a high degree of right and left-hemisphere activity (Experiment 2). In both experiments the beneficial effects of horizontal eye movements were greatest for strongly right-handed individuals. These results support recent work suggesting increased interhemispheric brain activity induced by bilateral horizontal eye movements, and extend this literature to the encoding and retrieval of landmark shape and location information.
  • Keywords
    Hemispheric interaction , Episodic memory , Spatial memory , Bilateral eye movements
  • Journal title
    Brain and Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Brain and Cognition
  • Record number

    2249966