The orienting response drives pseudoneglect—Evidence from an objective pupillometric method
Christoph Strauch,Christophe Romein,Marnix Naber,Stefan Van der Stigchel,Antonia F. Ten Brink +4 more
TLDR
In this paper , pupil light responses reveal pseudoneglect, a phenomenon typically assessed with paper-and-pencil tasks, limited by the requirement of explicit responses and the inability to assess on a subsecond timescale.About:
This article is published in Cortex.The article was published on 2022-04-01 and is currently open access. It has received 7 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Medicine & Pupillometry.read more
Citations
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Pupillometry as an integrated readout of distinct attentional networks
TL;DR: In this paper , a taxonomy of five factors that drive pupil responses is proposed, including light level and focal distance, two intermediate-level factors, alerting and orienting, and a higher-level factor, executive control.
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Investigating the role of human frontal eye field in the pupil light reflex modulation by saccade planning and working memory
TL;DR: The role of the frontal eye field (FEF) and superior colliculus in pupil local-luminance modulation was investigated in this article , where the authors found that pupil light reflex responses were transiently evoked by a bright patch stimulus presented during the delay period in the visual- and memory-delay tasks.
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Seeing an Auditory Object: Pupillary Light Response Reflects Covert Attention to Auditory Space and Object
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors show that the pupillary light response can serve as a physiological index of auditory attentional shift and can be used to probe the relationship between space-based and object-based attention as well.
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Attentional asymmetries in peripheral vision.
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors test if the attention window is indeed symmetric with regard to its shape and resolution during peripheral vision, and they find that stimuli presented to the left and top of the fixation point were more frequently identified correctly compared to those presented on the right bottom.
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Right-dominant contextual cueing for global configuration cues, but not local position cues
Stefan Pollmann,Lei Zheng +1 more
TL;DR: This article investigated the role of global configuration or local item position cues in the lateralization of contextual cueing effects and concluded that only configural cues enabled memory-guided search for targets across the whole search display, whereas position cueing guided search only to targets in the vicinity of the fixation.
References
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PsychoPy2: Experiments in behavior made easy
Jonathan W. Peirce,Jeremy R. Gray,Sol Simpson,Michael R. MacAskill,Richard Höchenberger,Hiroyuki Sogo,Erik K. Kastman,Jonas Kristoffer Lindeløv +7 more
TL;DR: The most notable addition has been that Builder interface, allowing users to create studies with minimal or no programming, while also allowing the insertion of Python code for maximal flexibility.
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Pseudoneglect: a review and meta-analysis of performance factors in line bisection tasks.
George Jewell,Mark E. McCourt +1 more
TL;DR: An exhaustive qualitative (vote-counting) review is conducted of the literature concerning visual and non-visual line bisection in neurologically normal subject populations, which indicates a significant leftward bisection error in Neurologically normal subjects.
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The cerebral basis of lateral asymmetries in attention
TL;DR: Asymmetries in the processing of input to either side of the midline are related to hemispheric specialization in man when preponderant activation of one hemisphere biases attention to the contralateral side.
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Spatial neglect and attention networks
TL;DR: It is argued that neglect is better explained by the dysfunction of distributed cortical networks for the control of attention than by structural damage of specific brain regions.
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Pseudoneglect: effects of hemispace on a tactile line bisection task.
Dawn Bowers,Kenneth M. Heilman +1 more
TL;DR: The findings indicated that both hemisphere-hemispace mechanisms and hemisphere-hand connections contributed to laterality effects, and a pseudoneglect phenomenon was observed.