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Visual Attention and Eye Movements

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University of Rochester

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Vision, Ocular

Treatments

Behavioral: Covert Spatial Attention

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03298737
RSRB00068408

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to provide information about how the brain processes sensory inputs using visual stimuli throughout various psychophysical experiments.

Full description

This laboratory studies visual perception with a focus on the interaction between eye movements and attention. It is well established that attending to a stimulus can profoundly alter perception. For example, attending to a speaker at a crowded party can almost completely filter background both in terms of auditory noise and visual distractions. Although laboratory studies have traditionally investigated the effects of attentional changes in the absence of eye movements, under natural conditions, visual attention is often accompanied by orienting movements to direct our head and eyes towards the relevant objects of interest. Recent work has suggested that these orienting movements affect perception in a manner similar to covert attention. The proposed studies will investigate how eye movements contribute to perception and attention.

The research covered by this protocol combines traditional "button-press" psychophysics with non-invasive eye-tracking to investigate the interaction between eye movements and perception. Subjects will perform simple perceptual tasks, such as judging the orientation or direction of a visual stimulus, while their eye position is monitored with a video eye-tracker. This approach (combining psychophysics and eye-tracking) is flexible, low risk, and fast when compared with neurophysiological studies. However, by focusing on low-level perceptual tasks, the results will be interpretable in the context of larger studies of neurophysiological responses in the visual system.

The investigators hope that this basic research will ultimately have both applied and clinical significance. For example, understanding how perception is influenced by attention and eye-movements in neurotypical populations may provide non-invasive and naturalistic ways to identify and diagnose psychiatric disorders. Additionally, understanding how eye-movements interact with sensory encoding has the potential to improve machine learning algorithms for vision and navigation (These are not a part of the current study, but a potential future impact).

Enrollment

20 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age between 18-65
  • Corrected-to-normal vision
  • No known diagnosis of visual or auditory disorder or impairment

Exclusion criteria

  • Does not have corrected-to-normal vision
  • Unable to understand and follow the instructions given of the study
  • Known diagnosis of visual or auditory disorder or impairment

Trial design

20 participants in 1 patient group

Correct to normal vision population
Treatment:
Behavioral: Covert Spatial Attention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jude Mitchell, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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