Rapid ocular responses are a robust marker for bottom-up driven auditory salience
Rapid ocular responses are a robust marker for bottom-up driven auditory salience
Abstract Despite the prevalent use of alerting sounds in alarms and human-machine interface systems, we have only a rudimentary understanding of what determines auditory salience - the automatic attraction of attention by sound - and the brain mechanisms which underlie this process. A major roadblock to understanding has been the lack of a robust, objective means of quantifying sound-driven attentional capture. Here we demonstrate that microsaccade inhibition – an oculomotor response arising within 300ms of sound onset - is a robust marker for the salience of brief sounds. Specifically, we show that a ‘crowd sourced’ (N=911) subjective salience ranking correlated robustly with the superior colliculus (SC) mediated ocular freezing response measured in na?ve, passively listening participants (replicated in two groups of N=15 each). More salient sounds evoked earlier microsaccadic inhibition, consistent with a faster orienting response. These results establish that microsaccade-indexed activity within the SC is a practical objective measure for auditory salience. Significance statementMicrosaccades are small, rapid, fixational eye movements, measurable with sensitive eye-tracking equipment. We reveal a novel, robust link between microsaccade dynamics and the subjective salience of brief sounds (salience ranking obtained from a large number of participants in an online experiment): Within 300 ms of sound onset, the eyes of na?ve, passively listening participants demonstrate different microsaccade patterns as a function of the sound’s perceptual salience. These results position the Superior Colliculus (the generator of microsaccades) as an important brain area to investigate in the context of a putative multi-modal salience-hub and establish a robust objective means for quantifying auditory salience, critical in the development of sound-based human machine interfaces.
Zhao Sijia、Furukawa Shigeto、Slaney Malcolm、Benhamou Elia、Chait Maria、Dick Fred、Yum Nga Wai、Benjamin Lucas
Ear Institute, University College LondonNTT Communication Science Laboratories, NTT CorporationAI Machine PerceptionDementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, University College LondonEar Institute, University College LondonDepartment of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College||Department of Experimental Psychology, University College LondonEar Institute, University College LondonEar Institute, University College London
生物物理学
MicrosaccadesAttentionPupil DilationSuperior ColliculusCrowd-computingacoustic roughness
Zhao Sijia,Furukawa Shigeto,Slaney Malcolm,Benhamou Elia,Chait Maria,Dick Fred,Yum Nga Wai,Benjamin Lucas.Rapid ocular responses are a robust marker for bottom-up driven auditory salience[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-12].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/498485.点此复制
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