4.2 Article

Are predictive saccades linked to the processing of peripheral information?

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG
Volume 87, Issue 5, Pages 1501-1519

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-022-01743-2

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High-level athletes can predict the actions of an opposing player through their gaze behavior. Research shows that in cricket, players first track the ball with their eyes and then make predictive saccades to the anticipated bounce and contact points. The study found that the information gathered through smooth-pursuit eye movements (SPEMs) is sufficient to predict when the object will hit the target location, and additional peripheral monitoring does not improve performance.
High-level athletes can predict the actions of an opposing player. Interestingly, such predictions are also reflected by the athlete's gaze behavior. In cricket, for example, players first pursue the ball with their eyes before they very often initiate two predictive saccades: one to the predicted ball-bounce point and a second to the predicted ball-bat-contact point. That means, they move their eyes ahead of the ball and wait for the ball at the new fixation location, potentially using their peripheral vision to update information about the ball's trajectory. In this study, we investigated whether predictive saccades are linked to the processing of information in peripheral vision and if predictive saccades are superior to continuously following the ball with foveal vision using smooth-pursuit eye-movements (SPEMs). In the first two experiments, we evoked the typical eye-movements observed in cricket and showed that the information gathered during SPEMs is sufficient to predict when the moving object will hit the target location and that (additional) peripheral monitoring of the object does not help to improve performance. In a third experiment, we show that it could actually be beneficial to use SPEMs rather than predictive saccades to improve performance. Thus, predictive saccades ahead of a target are unlikely to be performed to enhance the peripheral monitoring of target.

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