Title of article :
Eye movement suppression interferes with construction of object-centered spatial reference frames in working memory
Author/Authors :
Wallentin، نويسنده , , Mikkel and Kristensen، نويسنده , , Line Burholt and Olsen، نويسنده , , Jacob Hedeager and Nielsen، نويسنده , , Andreas Hّjlund، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
The brain’s frontal eye fields (FEF), responsible for eye movement control, are known to be involved in spatial working memory (WM).
revious fMRI experiment (Wallentin, Roepstorff & Burgess, Neuropsychologia, 2008) it was found that FEF activation was primarily related to the formation of an object-centered, rather than egocentric, spatial reference frame. In this behavioral experiment we wanted to demonstrate a causal relationship between eye movement control and manipulation of spatial reference frames. Sixty-two participants recalled either spatial (“Was X in front of Y?”) or non-spatial (“Was X darker than Y?”) relations in a previously shown image containing two to four objects, each with an intrinsic orientation and unique luminance. During half of all recall trials a moving visual stimulus was presented, which participants had to ignore, thus suppressing eye movement. Response times were significantly slower for spatial relations with distraction while there was no effect on non-spatial relations. There was no effect on accuracy, i.e. WM maintenance. This is consistent with the hypothesis that in spatial representations the FEFs are involved in WM content manipulation, such as establishing an object-centered spatial frame of reference.
Keywords :
Allocentric perspective , frontal eye fields , Spatial Working Memory , Eye movement suppression
Journal title :
Brain and Cognition
Journal title :
Brain and Cognition