Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision

Abstract The temporal acuity of a sensory system determines its capacity to detect delays between events, which enables following events in time and adapting behaviors accordingly. Whether and how voluntary attention drives visual temporal acuity is still unclear, especially in peripheral vision whe...

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Main Authors: Francois R. Foerster, A. Giersch, A. Cleeremans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:Communications Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s44271-025-00295-6
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author Francois R. Foerster
A. Giersch
A. Cleeremans
author_facet Francois R. Foerster
A. Giersch
A. Cleeremans
author_sort Francois R. Foerster
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The temporal acuity of a sensory system determines its capacity to detect delays between events, which enables following events in time and adapting behaviors accordingly. Whether and how voluntary attention drives visual temporal acuity is still unclear, especially in peripheral vision where attention is critical to avoid missing information. The present study aims at 1) evaluating whether cue-based spatial and temporal orientation of visual attention modulates the temporal acuity in peripheral vision, 2) assessing to what extent these modulations rely on shared or distinct attentional mechanisms, and 3) exploring whether these modulations are cumulative or independent from each other. Forty participants performed an asynchrony detection task in immersive virtual reality whilst electroencephalographic and pupillary dynamics were recorded. We found reductions of pupil constriction during the processing of attentional cues, suggesting that the pupil diameter represents a readout of the formation of spatiotemporal expectations. We further found that pre-target oscillatory dynamics in posterior theta and alpha bands are suppressed by both spatial and temporal orienting of attention, with cumulative effects, thus providing evidence for integrated mechanisms of spatial and temporal attention. Yet, despite these modulations, only explicit spatial orienting enhances the sensitivity to asynchronies. This highlights that explicit endogenous attention directed to space—but not to time—increases the temporal acuity under spatial uncertainty in peripheral vision. Overall, these results cast unambiguous doubts on the accepted trade-off that spatial attention meliorates spatial visual acuity while impeding temporal visual acuity, and thus call for the further refinement of models of visual attention.
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spelling doaj-art-d5814ad0e4a34f4bb90763bb92e52efb2025-08-20T03:06:04ZengNature PortfolioCommunications Psychology2731-91212025-07-013111210.1038/s44271-025-00295-6Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral visionFrancois R. Foerster0A. Giersch1A. Cleeremans2Consciousness, Cognition and Computation Group (CO3), Center for Research in Cognition and Neurosciences (CRCN), ULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB)Université de Strasbourg, INSERM U1329, Pôle de Psychiatrie, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de StrasbourgConsciousness, Cognition and Computation Group (CO3), Center for Research in Cognition and Neurosciences (CRCN), ULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB)Abstract The temporal acuity of a sensory system determines its capacity to detect delays between events, which enables following events in time and adapting behaviors accordingly. Whether and how voluntary attention drives visual temporal acuity is still unclear, especially in peripheral vision where attention is critical to avoid missing information. The present study aims at 1) evaluating whether cue-based spatial and temporal orientation of visual attention modulates the temporal acuity in peripheral vision, 2) assessing to what extent these modulations rely on shared or distinct attentional mechanisms, and 3) exploring whether these modulations are cumulative or independent from each other. Forty participants performed an asynchrony detection task in immersive virtual reality whilst electroencephalographic and pupillary dynamics were recorded. We found reductions of pupil constriction during the processing of attentional cues, suggesting that the pupil diameter represents a readout of the formation of spatiotemporal expectations. We further found that pre-target oscillatory dynamics in posterior theta and alpha bands are suppressed by both spatial and temporal orienting of attention, with cumulative effects, thus providing evidence for integrated mechanisms of spatial and temporal attention. Yet, despite these modulations, only explicit spatial orienting enhances the sensitivity to asynchronies. This highlights that explicit endogenous attention directed to space—but not to time—increases the temporal acuity under spatial uncertainty in peripheral vision. Overall, these results cast unambiguous doubts on the accepted trade-off that spatial attention meliorates spatial visual acuity while impeding temporal visual acuity, and thus call for the further refinement of models of visual attention.https://doi.org/10.1038/s44271-025-00295-6
spellingShingle Francois R. Foerster
A. Giersch
A. Cleeremans
Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
Communications Psychology
title Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
title_full Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
title_fullStr Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
title_full_unstemmed Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
title_short Spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
title_sort spatial but not temporal orienting of attention enhances the temporal acuity of human peripheral vision
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s44271-025-00295-6
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AT acleeremans spatialbutnottemporalorientingofattentionenhancesthetemporalacuityofhumanperipheralvision