Skip to content
The bengaluru live

The Bengaluru Live | Bengaluru News, Breaking Updates

It's Your Voice

BWSSB 5
Primary Menu
  • HOME
  • Bengaluru
  • Karnataka
  • POLITICS
  • CRIME
  • Delhi
  • Kannada News
  • Hindi News
  • MORE NEWS
    • Supreme Court
    • CITY UPDATES
    • PM
    • SPORTS
    • STATE
    • EDUCATION
    • ENTERTAINMENT
    • HEALTH
    • Real Estate
    • SPORTS
    • CORONA
    • MOBILITY/TRANSPORT
    • Horoscope
  • Home
  • CITY UPDATES
  • IISc studies explore how attention and eye movements are linked closely
  • CITY UPDATES
  • STATE

IISc studies explore how attention and eye movements are linked closely

1 March 2024 4 minutes read
0
📘 Read this story in Kannada

Bengaluru, Mar 1 (PTI) Two new studies from the Centre for Neuroscience at the Indian Institute of Science here explore how attention and eye movements are linked closely and unveil how the brain coordinates the two processes.

Attention is a unique phenomenon that allows us to focus on a specific object in our visual world and ignore distractions.

When we pay attention to an object, we tend to gaze towards it, leading scientists to suspect that attention is tightly coupled to rapid eye movements, called saccades. In fact, even before our eyes move towards an object, our attention focuses on it, allowing us to perceive it more clearly, which is a well-known phenomenon called pre-saccadic attention.

However, in a new study published in the journal ‘PLOS Biology’, the researchers at CNS show that this perceptual advantage is lost when the object changes suddenly, even a split second before our gaze falls upon it, making it harder for us to process what changed.

“Our study provides an interesting counterpoint to many previous studies which suggested that pre-saccadic attention is always beneficial,” explained Devarajan Sridharan, Associate Professor at CNS and corresponding author of the study.

In the ‘PLOS Biology’ study, Priyanka Gupta, a PhD student in Sridharan’s laboratory, trained human volunteers to covertly monitor gratings (line patterns) presented on a screen without directly looking at them and to report when one tilted slightly, according to a press release issued on Thursday by the Bengaluru-headquartered IISc.

“Importantly, the participants did this task just before their eyes moved, in the pre-saccadic window. So, we were able to study the relationship between pre-saccadic attention and the detection of changes in the visual environment,” explained Gupta.

A tracker was used to monitor their eye movements before, during, and after their gaze fell on the object, the release said.

“To our surprise, participants found it harder to detect the changes in the pre-saccadic window,” Gupta added.

In a follow-up experiment, they made the participants monitor two gratings presented one after the other quickly, again, just before their eyes moved. What the team found was that if the orientation of the second grating suddenly changed during this time, the participants tended to mix up the orientations of the two gratings– explaining the loss of the attentional advantage, IISc said.

“This is essentially a basic science study,” said Sridharan. But such insights, he added, can be useful for how we track multiple objects in rapidly changing environments — in driving or flight simulators, for example.

In the other study published in the journal ‘Science Advances’, carried out with collaborators at Stanford University, the researchers used an unusual experiment –this time, to decouple attention from eye movements — in monkeys.

Their goal was to tease out what was happening in the brain while these processes played out.

The monkeys had been trained on a counter-intuitive task called an “anti-saccade” task.

Like the human study, the monkeys covertly monitored several gratings on a computer screen without directly looking at them. But when any one grating tilted slightly, the monkeys had to look away from it instead of focusing more sharply on it. This helped the researchers delink the location of the monkey’s attention, from the location where its gaze ultimately fell.

Using a special kind of electrode called a “U-probe”, they also recorded signals from hundreds of neurons across different layers of a specific region in the monkey’s brain called the visual cortex area V4.

What they found was that neurons in the more superficial layers of the cortex generated attention signals, while neurons in deeper layers produced eye movement signals.

Interestingly, these neurons also showed different activity patterns.

“The superficial neurons increased their firing rates, to signal the object that needs to be attended to and prioritised for decision-making,” said Adithya Narayan Chandrasekaran, first author of the Science Advances study and a former research assistant in Sridharan’s lab at CNS.

On the other hand, the deep neurons were tuning down their “noise”, possibly to allow the animal to perceive the object better, it was stated.

The researchers believe that uncovering such brain signatures can eventually point to what fails in attention disorders.

Sridharan said, “Discovering such mechanisms is vital for developing therapies for disorders like ADHD.” PTI RS SDP

About the Author

View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: Why extra day of leap year falls on February 29 and not December 32?
Next: Nikki Haley hammers Trump for being all about himself; faces protests in Virginia

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Stories

Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission
  • STATE

Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission

The Bengaluru Live 5 June 2026
  • STATE

Karnataka Backward Classes Commission Warns Against Sharing Survey Data, Cites High Court Confidentiality Orders

Satya Prakash Chaubey 2 June 2026
  • STATE

Supreme Court Dismisses Tamil Nadu Plea on Mekedatu Project; DK Shivakumar Calls It ‘Good News’ for Karnataka

Satya Prakash Chaubey 26 May 2026

Latest Post

₹40-Crore Land Reclaimed After Decade-Long Battle; Hope Farm Underpass Set for Fast-Track Completion ₹40-Crore Land Reclaimed After Decade-Long Battle; Hope Farm Underpass Set for Fast-Track Completion
  • Bengaluru

₹40-Crore Land Reclaimed After Decade-Long Battle; Hope Farm Underpass Set for Fast-Track Completion

6 June 2026
Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission
  • STATE

Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission

5 June 2026
Ramalinga Reddy Quits Karnataka Cabinet in Just 42 Hours, Says ‘Cannot Work Against My Conscience’ Ramalinga Reddy Quits Karnataka Cabinet in Just 42 Hours, Says ‘Cannot Work Against My Conscience’
  • POLITICS

Ramalinga Reddy Quits Karnataka Cabinet in Just 42 Hours, Says ‘Cannot Work Against My Conscience’

5 June 2026
Lokayukta Cracks Down on Bengaluru Garbage Black Spots, Deploys Five Teams Across City Corporations Lokayukta Cracks Down on Bengaluru Garbage Black Spots, Deploys Five Teams Across City Corporations
  • Bengaluru

Lokayukta Cracks Down on Bengaluru Garbage Black Spots, Deploys Five Teams Across City Corporations

5 June 2026
CM D.K. Shivakumar Calls for Green Karnataka, Announces 15 Lakh Saplings Drive on Kempegowda Jayanti CM D.K. Shivakumar Calls for Green Karnataka, Announces 15 Lakh Saplings Drive on Kempegowda Jayanti
  • Bengaluru

CM D.K. Shivakumar Calls for Green Karnataka, Announces 15 Lakh Saplings Drive on Kempegowda Jayanti

5 June 2026
Mallikarjun Kharge Files Rajya Sabha Nomination from Karnataka in Presence of Rahul Gandhi, CM D.K. Shivakumar Mallikarjun Kharge Files Rajya Sabha Nomination from Karnataka in Presence of Rahul Gandhi, CM D.K. Shivakumar
  • POLITICS

Mallikarjun Kharge Files Rajya Sabha Nomination from Karnataka in Presence of Rahul Gandhi, CM D.K. Shivakumar

5 June 2026

You may have missed

₹40-Crore Land Reclaimed After Decade-Long Battle; Hope Farm Underpass Set for Fast-Track Completion
  • Bengaluru

₹40-Crore Land Reclaimed After Decade-Long Battle; Hope Farm Underpass Set for Fast-Track Completion

The Bengaluru Live 6 June 2026
Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission
  • STATE

Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission

The Bengaluru Live 5 June 2026
Ramalinga Reddy Quits Karnataka Cabinet in Just 42 Hours, Says ‘Cannot Work Against My Conscience’
  • POLITICS

Ramalinga Reddy Quits Karnataka Cabinet in Just 42 Hours, Says ‘Cannot Work Against My Conscience’

Atul Chaturvedi 5 June 2026
Lokayukta Cracks Down on Bengaluru Garbage Black Spots, Deploys Five Teams Across City Corporations
  • Bengaluru

Lokayukta Cracks Down on Bengaluru Garbage Black Spots, Deploys Five Teams Across City Corporations

The Bengaluru Live 5 June 2026

About us

The Bengaluru Live is one of the local digital media house which is publishing news in English and in Kannada language. We are also one of the largest local news providers on the internet through our news websites.

Useful Links

  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy

Recent News

  • ₹40-Crore Land Reclaimed After Decade-Long Battle; Hope Farm Underpass Set for Fast-Track Completion
  • Samudra Manthan Yields Another ‘Amrit’: Natural Gas Discovery in Andaman Sea Boosts India’s Energy Security Mission
  • Ramalinga Reddy Quits Karnataka Cabinet in Just 42 Hours, Says ‘Cannot Work Against My Conscience’
  • Lokayukta Cracks Down on Bengaluru Garbage Black Spots, Deploys Five Teams Across City Corporations
©Copyright 2025 The Bengaluru Live All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.