Authors
Tessel Blom, Sebastiaan Mathôt, Christian NL Olivers, Stefan Van der Stigchel
Publication date
2016/11
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Volume
42
Issue
11
Pages
1716
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
The pupillary light response has been shown not to be a purely reflexive mechanism but to be sensitive to higher order perceptual processes, such as covert visual attention. In the present study we examined whether the pupillary light response is modulated by stimuli that are not physically present but are maintained in visual working memory. In all conditions, displays contained both bright and dark stimuli. Participants were instructed to covertly attend and encode either the bright or the dark stimuli, which then had to be maintained in visual working memory for a subsequent change-detection task. The pupil was smaller in response to encoding bright stimuli compared to dark stimuli. However, this effect did not sustain during the maintenance phase. This was the case even when brightness was directly relevant for the working memory task. These results reveal that the encoding of task-relevant and physically …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T Blom, S Mathôt, CNL Olivers, S Van der Stigchel - … of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and …, 2016