Adaptive Gaze Strategies to Reduce Environmental Uncertainty During a Sequential Visuomotor Behaviour

Abstract People must decide where, when, and for how long to allocate gaze to perform different motor behaviours. However, the factors guiding gaze during these ongoing, natural behaviours are poorly understood. Gaze shifts help acquire information, suggesting that people should direct gaze to locat...

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Autores principales: F. Javier Domínguez-Zamora, Shaila M. Gunn, Daniel S. Marigold
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/814266faac73438e8a6e0d045569ab2a
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Sumario:Abstract People must decide where, when, and for how long to allocate gaze to perform different motor behaviours. However, the factors guiding gaze during these ongoing, natural behaviours are poorly understood. Gaze shifts help acquire information, suggesting that people should direct gaze to locations where environmental details most relevant to the task are uncertain. To explore this, human subjects stepped on a series of targets as they walked. We used different levels of target uncertainty, and through instruction, altered the importance of (or subjective value assigned to) foot-placement accuracy. Gaze time on targets increased with greater target uncertainty when precise foot placement was more important, and these longer gaze times associated with reduced foot-placement error. Gaze times as well as the gaze shifts to and from targets relative to stepping differed depending on the target’s position in the sequence and uncertainty level. Overall, we show that gaze is allocated to reduce uncertainty about target locations, and this depends on the value of this information gain for successful task performance. Furthermore, we show that the spatial-temporal pattern of gaze to resolve uncertainty changes with the evolution of the motor behaviour, indicating a flexible strategy to plan and control movement.