Microsaccades Track Location-Based Object Rehearsal in Visual Working Memory

Eelke de Vries*, Freek van Ede*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Besides controlling eye movements, the brain's oculomotor system has been implicated in the control of covert spatial attention and the rehearsal of spatial information in working memory. We investigated whether the oculomotor system also contributes to rehearsing visual objects in working memory when object location is never asked about. To address this, we tracked the incidental use of locations for mnemonic rehearsal via directional biases in microsaccades while participants maintained two visual objects (colored oriented gratings) in working memory. By varying the stimulus configuration (horizon-tal, diagonal, and vertical) at encoding, we could quantify whether microsaccades were more aligned with the configurational axis of the memory contents, as opposed to the orthogonal axis. Experiment 1 revealed that microsaccades continued to be biased along the axis of the memory content several sec-onds into the working memory delay. In Experiment 2, we confirmed that this directional microsaccade bias was specific to memory demands, ruling out lingering effects from passive and attentive encoding of the same visual objects in the same configurations. Thus, by studying microsaccade directions, we uncover oculomotor-driven rehearsal of visual objects in working memory through their associated locations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-14
Number of pages14
JournaleNeuro
Volume11
Issue number1
Early online date4 Jan 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was supported by an ERC Starting Grant from the European Research Council (MEMTICIPATION, 850636) and an NWO Vidi Grant by the Dutch Research Council (grant number 14721) to F.v.E. The authors thank Anna van Harmelen and Baiwei Liu for their valuable comments on the manuscript.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 de Vries and van Ede.

Funding

This research was supported by an ERC Starting Grant from the European Research Council (MEMTICIPATION, 850636) and an NWO Vidi Grant by the Dutch Research Council (grant number 14721) to F.v.E. The authors thank Anna van Harmelen and Baiwei Liu for their valuable comments on the manuscript.

FundersFunder number
MEMTICIPATION850636
European Research Council
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek14721
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

    Keywords

    • attention
    • eye movements
    • microsaccades
    • oculomotor system
    • task-dependent
    • visual working memory

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