Investigating neural correlates of locomotion transition via temporal relation of EEG and EOG-recorded eye movements

2021 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 104350
Author(s):  
Dhruv Mehra ◽  
Ashutosh Tiwari ◽  
Deepak Joshi
Author(s):  
Jan-Philipp Tauscher ◽  
Fabian Wolf Schottky ◽  
Steve Grogorick ◽  
Marcus Magnor ◽  
Maryam Mustafa

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordana S. Wynn ◽  
Zhong-Xu Liu ◽  
Jennifer D. Ryan

AbstractMounting evidence linking gaze reinstatement- the recapitulation of encoding-related gaze patterns during retrieval- to behavioral measures of memory suggests that eye movements play an important role in mnemonic processing. Yet, the nature of the gaze scanpath, including its informational content and neural correlates, has remained in question. In the present study, we examined eye movement and neural data from a recognition memory task to further elucidate the behavioral and neural bases of functional gaze reinstatement. Consistent with previous work, gaze reinstatement during retrieval of freely-viewed scene images was greater than chance and predictive of recognition memory performance. Gaze reinstatement was also associated with viewing of informationally salient image regions at encoding, suggesting that scanpaths may encode and contain high-level scene content. At the brain level, gaze reinstatement was predicted by encoding-related activity in the occipital pole and basal ganglia, neural regions associated with visual processing and oculomotor control. Finally, cross-voxel brain pattern similarity analysis revealed overlapping subsequent memory and subsequent gaze reinstatement modulation effects in the parahippocampal place area and hippocampus, in addition to the occipital pole and basal ganglia. Together, these findings suggest that encoding-related activity in brain regions associated with scene processing, oculomotor control, and memory supports the formation, and subsequent recapitulation, of functional scanpaths. More broadly, these findings lend support to Scanpath Theory’s assertion that eye movements both encode, and are themselves embedded in, mnemonic representations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Talanow ◽  
Anna-Maria Kasparbauer ◽  
Julia V. Lippold ◽  
Bernd Weber ◽  
Ulrich Ettinger

2007 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ezequiel Morsella ◽  
John A. Bargh

To further illuminate the nature of conscious states, it may be progressive to integrate Merker's important contribution with what is known regarding (a) the temporal relation between conscious states and activation of the mesodiencephalic system; (b) the nature of the information (e.g., perceptual vs. premotor) involved in conscious integration; and (c) the neural correlates of olfactory consciousness.


2004 ◽  
Vol 161 (10) ◽  
pp. 1918-1921 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich Ettinger ◽  
Veena Kumari ◽  
Xavier A. Chitnis ◽  
Philip J. Corr ◽  
Trevor J. Crawford ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (9) ◽  
pp. 1374-1391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benthe Kornrumpf ◽  
Florian Niefind ◽  
Werner Sommer ◽  
Olaf Dimigen

Neural correlates of word recognition are commonly studied with (rapid) serial visual presentation (RSVP), a condition that eliminates three fundamental properties of natural reading: parafoveal preprocessing, saccade execution, and the fast changes in attentional processing load occurring from fixation to fixation. We combined eye-tracking and EEG to systematically investigate the impact of all three factors on brain-electric activity during reading. Participants read lists of words either actively with eye movements (eliciting fixation-related potentials) or maintained fixation while the text moved passively through foveal vision at a matched pace (RSVP-with-flankers paradigm, eliciting ERPs). The preview of the upcoming word was manipulated by changing the number of parafoveally visible letters. Processing load was varied by presenting words of varying lexical frequency. We found that all three factors have strong interactive effects on the brain's responses to words: Once a word was fixated, occipitotemporal N1 amplitude decreased monotonically with the amount of parafoveal information available during the preceding fixation; hence, the N1 component was markedly attenuated under reading conditions with preview. Importantly, this preview effect was substantially larger during active reading (with saccades) than during passive RSVP with flankers, suggesting that the execution of eye movements facilitates word recognition by increasing parafoveal preprocessing. Lastly, we found that the N1 component elicited by a word also reflects the lexical processing load imposed by the previously inspected word. Together, these results demonstrate that, under more natural conditions, words are recognized in a spatiotemporally distributed and interdependent manner across multiple eye fixations, a process that is mediated by active motor behavior.


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