» Articles » PMID: 37615158

Inferential Eye Movement Control While Following Dynamic Gaze

Overview
Journal Elife
Specialty Biology
Date 2023 Aug 24
PMID 37615158
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Attending to other people's gaze is evolutionary important to make inferences about intentions and actions. Gaze influences covert attention and triggers eye movements. However, we know little about how the brain controls the fine-grain dynamics of eye movements during gaze following. Observers followed people's gaze shifts in videos during search and we related the observer eye movement dynamics to the time course of gazer head movements extracted by a deep neural network. We show that the observers' brains use information in the visual periphery to execute predictive saccades that anticipate the information in the gazer's head direction by 190-350ms. The brain simultaneously monitors moment-to-moment changes in the gazer's head velocity to dynamically alter eye movements and re-fixate the gazer (reverse saccades) when the head accelerates before the initiation of the first forward gaze-following saccade. Using saccade-contingent manipulations of the videos, we experimentally show that the reverse saccades are planned concurrently with the first forward gaze-following saccade and have a functional role in reducing subsequent errors fixating on the gaze goal. Together, our findings characterize the inferential and functional nature of social attention's fine-grain eye movement dynamics.

Citing Articles

Examining holistic processing strategies in dogs and humans through gaze behavior.

Park S, Niehorster D, Huber L, Viranyi Z PLoS One. 2025; 20(2):e0317455.

PMID: 39970140 PMC: 11838905. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0317455.

References
1.
Mack S, Eckstein M . Object co-occurrence serves as a contextual cue to guide and facilitate visual search in a natural viewing environment. J Vis. 2011; 11(9):1-16. DOI: 10.1167/11.9.9. View

2.
Sun Z, Yu W, Zhou J, Shen M . Perceiving crowd attention: Gaze following in human crowds with conflicting cues. Atten Percept Psychophys. 2017; 79(4):1039-1049. DOI: 10.3758/s13414-017-1303-z. View

3.
Curcio C, Sloan Jr K, Packer O, Hendrickson A, KALINA R . Distribution of cones in human and monkey retina: individual variability and radial asymmetry. Science. 1987; 236(4801):579-82. DOI: 10.1126/science.3576186. View

4.
Langton , Watt , Bruce I . Do the eyes have it? Cues to the direction of social attention. Trends Cogn Sci. 2000; 4(2):50-59. DOI: 10.1016/s1364-6613(99)01436-9. View

5.
Rucci M, Iovin R, Poletti M, Santini F . Miniature eye movements enhance fine spatial detail. Nature. 2007; 447(7146):851-4. DOI: 10.1038/nature05866. View