The interference effect of concurrent working memory task on visual inhibitory control

Keywords: eye movement, eye tracking, saccades, antisaccades, working memory, inhibitory control, prefrontal cortex

Abstract

We examined the interference between inhibitory control of a saccadic eye movement and a working memory task. This study was motivated by the observation that people are suscep-tible to cognitive errors when they are preoccupied. Subjects were instructed to make an anti-saccade, or to look in the opposite direction of a visual stimulus, thereby exercising inhibito-ry control over the reflexive eye movement towards a salient object. At the same time, the subjects were instructed to memorize a random sequence of digits that were read out to them, thereby engaging their working memory. We measured the success of an eye movement by rapidly switching between images and asking the subjects what they saw. We found that these concurrent cognitive tasks significantly degraded anti-saccade performance.

We examined the interference between inhibitory control of a saccadic eye movement and a working memory task. This study was motivated by the observation that people are susceptible to cognitive errors when they are preoccupied. Subjects were instructed to make an anti-saccade, or to look in the opposite direction of a visual stimulus, thereby exercising inhibitory control over the reflexive eye movement towards a salient object. At the same time, the subjects were instructed to memorize a random sequence of digits that were read out to them, thereby engaging their working memory. We measured the success of an eye movement by rapidly switching between images and asking the subjects what they saw. We found that these concurrent cognitive tasks significantly degraded anti-saccade performance.

Published
2016-04-27
How to Cite
Hong, B. M., Weiner, S., Clancy, M., & Kouh, M. (2016). The interference effect of concurrent working memory task on visual inhibitory control. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 9(3). https://doi.org/10.16910/jemr.9.3.5
Section
Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)