Attentional modulation of peripheral pointing hypometria in healthy participants: An insight into optic ataxia?

Tristan Jurkiewicz, Audrey Vialatte, Yaffa Yeshurun, Laure Pisella

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Damage to the superior parietal lobule and intraparietal sulcus (SPL-IPS) causes optic ataxia (OA), characterized by pathological gaze-centered hypometric pointing to targets in the affected peripheral visual field. The SPL-IPS is also involved in covert attention. Here, we investigated the possible link between attention and action. This study investigated the effect of attention on pointing performance in healthy participants and two OA patients. In invalid trials, targets appeared unpredictably across different visual fields and eccentricities. Valid trials involved cued targets at specific locations. The first experiment used a central cue with 75% validity, the second used a peripheral cue with 50% validity. The effect of attention on pointing variability (noise) or time was expected as a confirmation of cueing efficiency. Critically, if OA reflects an attentional deficit, then healthy participants, in the invalid condition (without attention), were expected to produce the gaze-centered hypometric pointing bias characteristic of OA. Results: revealed main effects of validity on pointing biases in all participants with central predictive cueing, but not with peripheral low predictive cueing. This suggests that the typical underestimation of visual eccentricity in OA (visual field effect) at least partially results from impaired endogenous attention orientation toward the affected visual field.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109084
JournalNeuropsychologia
Volume208
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Feb 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors

Keywords

  • Covert attention
  • Intraparietal sulcus
  • Peripheral vision
  • Positional encoding
  • Reaching
  • Spatial attention
  • Superior parietal lobule

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Behavioral Neuroscience

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