The interplay between task difficulty and microsaccade rate: Evidence for the critical role of visual load
Version
Published
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Schneider, Andrea
Krueger, Eva
Meteier, Quentin
Luethold, Patrick
Chavaillaz, Alain
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
In previous research, microsaccades have been suggested as psychophysiological indicators of task load. So far, it is still under debate how different types of task demands are influencing microsaccade rate. This piece of research examines the relation between visual load, mental load and microsaccade rate. Fourteen participants carried out a continuous performance task (n-back), in which visual (letters vs. abstract figures) and mental task load (1-back to 4-back) were manipulated as within-subjects variables. Eye tracking data, performance data as well as subjective workload were recorded. Data analysis revealed an increased level of microsaccade rate for stimuli of high visual demand (i.e. abstract figures), while mental demand (n-back-level) did not modulate microsaccade rate. In conclusion, the present results suggest that microsaccade rate reflects visual load of a task rather than its mental load.
Subjects
BF Psychology
Publisher DOI
Journal
Journal of Eye Movement Research
ISSN
1995-8692
Publisher URL
Volume
13
Issue
5
Submitter
Sonderegger, Andreas
Citation apa
Schneider, A., Sonderegger, A., Krueger, E., Meteier, Q., Luethold, P., & Chavaillaz, A. (2021). The interplay between task difficulty and microsaccade rate: Evidence for the critical role of visual load. In Journal of Eye Movement Research (Vol. 13, Issue 5). https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.14870
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