Skip to main content
Dryad

Fast saccadic eye-movements in humans suggest that numerosity perception is automatic and direct.

Cite this dataset

Castaldi, Elisa; Burr, David; Turi, Marco; Binda, Paola (2020). Fast saccadic eye-movements in humans suggest that numerosity perception is automatic and direct. [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.7d7wm37s6

Abstract

Fast saccades are rapid automatic oculomotor responses to salient and ecologically important visual stimuli such as animals and faces. Discriminating the number of friends, foe or prey may also have an evolutionary advantage. In this study participants were asked to saccade rapidly towards the more numerous of two arrays. Participants could discriminate numerosities with high accuracy and great speed, as fast as 190 ms. Intermediate numerosities were more likely to elicit fast saccades than very low or very high numerosities. Reaction-times for vocal responses (collected in a separate experiment) were slower, did not depend on numerical range, and correlated only with the slow, not the fast saccades, pointing to different systems.  The short saccadic-reaction times we observe are surprising given that discrimination using numerosity estimation is thought to require a relatively complex neural circuit, with several relays of information through parietal and pre-frontal cortex. Our results suggest that fast numerosity-driven saccades may be generated on a single feed-forward pass of information recruiting a primitive system that cuts through the cortical hierarchy and rapidly transforms the numerosity information into a saccade command.