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Tuning in to a hip-hop beat: Pursuit eye movements reveal processing of biological motion

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-01, 13:36 authored by David SoutoDavid Souto, Jennifer Sudkamp, Kyle Nacilla, Mateusz Bocian
Smooth pursuit eye movements are mainly driven by motion signals to achieve their goal of reducing retinal motion blur. However, they can also show anticipation of predictable movement patterns. Oculomotor predictions may rely on an internal model of the target kinematics. Most investigations on the nature of those predictions have concentrated on simple stimuli, such as a decontextualized dot. However, biological motion is one of the most important visual stimuli in regulating human interaction and its perception involves integration of form and motion across time and space. Therefore, we asked whether there is a specific contribution of an internal model of biological motion in driving pursuit eye movements. Unlike previous contributions, we exploited the cyclical nature of walking to measure eye movement's ability to track the velocity oscillations of the hip of point-light walkers. We quantified the quality of tracking by cross-correlating pursuit and hip velocity oscillations. We found a robust correlation between signals, even along the horizontal dimension, where changes in velocity during the stepping cycle are very subtle. The inversion of the walker and the presentation of the hip-dot without context incurred the same additional phase lag along the horizontal dimension. These findings support the view that information beyond the hip-dot contributes to the prediction of hip kinematics that controls pursuit. We also found a smaller phase lag in inverted walkers for pursuit along the vertical dimension compared to upright walkers, indicating that inversion does not simply reduce prediction. We suggest that pursuit eye movements reflect the visual processing of biological motion and as such could provide an implicit measure of higher-level visual function.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences College of Science & Engineering Psychology & Vision Sciences Engineering

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Human Movement Science

Volume

91

Pagination

103126

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0167-9457

eissn

1872-7646

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2024-08-01

Spatial coverage

Netherlands

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr David Souto

Deposit date

2024-07-29

Data Access Statement

Data is publicly available (https://osf.io/56a8v/).