Cognitive and Ocular Factors Jointly Determine Pupil Responses under Equiluminance

Open Access
Authors
  • S. Hoppenbrouwers
  • J. Theeuwes
Publication date 18-05-2016
Journal PLoS ONE
Article number e0155574
Volume | Issue number 11 | 5
Number of pages 13
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Changes in pupil diameter can reflect high-level cognitive signals that depend on central neuromodulatory mechanisms. However, brain mechanisms that adjust pupil size are also exquisitely sensitive to changes in luminance and other events that would be considered a nuisance in cognitive experiments recording pupil size. We implemented a simple auditory experiment involving no changes in visual stimulation. Using finite impulse-response fitting we found pupil responses triggered by different types of events. Among these are pupil responses to auditory events and associated surprise: cognitive effects. However, these cognitive responses were overshadowed by pupil responses associated with blinks and eye movements, both inevitable nuisance factors that lead to changes in effective lumi- nance. Of note, these latter pupil responses were not recording artifacts caused by blinks and eye movements, but endogenous pupil responses that occurred in the wake of these events. Furthermore, we identified slow (tonic) changes in pupil size that differentially influ- enced faster (phasic) pupil responses. Fitting all pupil responses using gamma functions, we provide accurate characterisations of cognitive and non-cognitive response shapes, and quantify each response's dependence on tonic pupil size. These results allow us to cre- ate a set of recommendations for pupil size analysis in cognitive neuroscience, which we have implemented in freely available software.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155574
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Cognitive and Ocular Factors (Final published version)
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