Abstract
The appearance of a salient stimulus rapidly inhibits saccadic eye movements. Curiously, this “oculomotor freezing” reflex is triggered only by stimuli that the observer reports seeing. It remains unknown, however, if oculomotor freezing is linked to the observer’s sensory experience, or their decision that a stimulus was present. To dissociate between these possibilities, we manipulated decision criterion via monetary payoffs and stimulus probability in a detection task. These manipulations greatly shifted observers’ decision criteria but did not affect the degree to which microsaccades were inhibited by stimulus presence. Moreover, the link between oculomotor freezing and explicit reports of stimulus presence was stronger when the criterion was conservative rather than liberal. We conclude that the sensory threshold for oculomotor freezing is independent of decision bias. Provided that conscious experience is also unaffected by such bias, oculomotor freezing is an implicit indicator of sensory awareness.
New & Noteworthy Sometimes a visual stimulus reaches awareness, and sometimes it does not. To understand why, we need objective, bias-free measures of awareness. We discovered that a reflexive freezing of small eye movements indicates when an observer detects a stimulus. Furthermore, when we biased observers’ decisions to report seeing the stimulus, the oculomotor reflex was unaltered. This suggests that the threshold for conscious perception is independent of the decision criterion and is revealed by oculomotor freezing.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Text shortened and clarified.