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Title: Attentional release in the saccadic gap effect. Author: Jin Z, Reeves A. Journal: Vision Res; 2009 Jul; 49(16):2045-55. PubMed ID: 19268494. Abstract: Can a release of attention from fixation help explain the saccadic 'gap effect', the shortening of saccadic latency (SL) when the fixation spot is extinguished just before saccade target onset? Practiced observers generated SLs and button-presses to one of four 10 degrees eccentric targets in overlap (fixation spot stays on), gap0 (fixation offsets at target onset), and gap200 conditions; in gap200, the fixation spot was removed, dimmed, expanded, or brightened 200ms before target onset. Our data excluded speed-accuracy trade-offs, express saccades, stimulus salience, and oculomotor readiness, while fixation offset and general warning had minor effects, leaving attention release as the default explanation. Supporting this notion, finger-press reactions to foveal probe dots presented after the fixation spot was brightened (to hold attention) were faster than those made after the spot was removed (to release attention). Varying the time from gap onset to the probe dot mapped out the time-course of the putative attentional release, which takes approximately 140ms.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]