PURPOSE. To characterize dynamic properties of combined saccade–vergence eye movements that occur as the point of visual fixation is shifted between objects lying in different directions and at different depths. METHODS. Using the scleral search-coil technique, eye movements were measured in 10 normal subjects as they made voluntary, disjunctive gaze shifts comprising a range of saccades and vergence movements. RESULTS. By analyzing eye acceleration records, the authors identified small-amplitude (0.2–0.7°), high-frequency (23–33 Hz), conjugate horizontal oscillations of the eyes during the vergence movement that followed the initial saccade. When the shift of the fixation point required a large vergence component (17°), every subject showe...
AbstractConjugate post-saccadic eye drift can be induced in normal humans if a visual pattern is mad...
Disconjugate oculomotor adaptation is driven by the need to maintain binocular vision. Since binocul...
When we track an object moving in depth, our eyes rotate in opposite directions. This type of “disju...
during saccades. Simulations ofthese modelilead to a number of I. We recorded eye movements in four ...
AbstractThis paper describes the spatial trajectories of the binocular fixation point (the intersect...
AbstractWe studied the dynamics of voluntary, horizontal, binocular gaze-shifts between pairs of con...
AbstractIn a natural environment, saccade and vergence eye movements shift gaze in different directi...
If two targets are carefully aligned so that they fall along the cyclopean axis, the required eye mo...
Rapid shifts of the point of visual fixation between equidistant targets require equal-sized saccade...
AbstractWe studied the dynamics of pure vergence shifts and vergence shifts combined with vertical a...
New-onset impairment of ocular motility will cause incomitant strabismus, i.e., a gaze-dependent ocu...
We studied the dynamics of voluntary, horizontal, binocular gaze-shifts between pairs of continuousl...
Two human subjects, who had no signs of other neurologic disorders, produced large amplitude, to-and...
In this chapter a series of experiments are described where large-amplitude gaze shifts were recorde...
Humans and many animals make frequent saccades requiring coordinated movements of the eyes. When lan...
AbstractConjugate post-saccadic eye drift can be induced in normal humans if a visual pattern is mad...
Disconjugate oculomotor adaptation is driven by the need to maintain binocular vision. Since binocul...
When we track an object moving in depth, our eyes rotate in opposite directions. This type of “disju...
during saccades. Simulations ofthese modelilead to a number of I. We recorded eye movements in four ...
AbstractThis paper describes the spatial trajectories of the binocular fixation point (the intersect...
AbstractWe studied the dynamics of voluntary, horizontal, binocular gaze-shifts between pairs of con...
AbstractIn a natural environment, saccade and vergence eye movements shift gaze in different directi...
If two targets are carefully aligned so that they fall along the cyclopean axis, the required eye mo...
Rapid shifts of the point of visual fixation between equidistant targets require equal-sized saccade...
AbstractWe studied the dynamics of pure vergence shifts and vergence shifts combined with vertical a...
New-onset impairment of ocular motility will cause incomitant strabismus, i.e., a gaze-dependent ocu...
We studied the dynamics of voluntary, horizontal, binocular gaze-shifts between pairs of continuousl...
Two human subjects, who had no signs of other neurologic disorders, produced large amplitude, to-and...
In this chapter a series of experiments are described where large-amplitude gaze shifts were recorde...
Humans and many animals make frequent saccades requiring coordinated movements of the eyes. When lan...
AbstractConjugate post-saccadic eye drift can be induced in normal humans if a visual pattern is mad...
Disconjugate oculomotor adaptation is driven by the need to maintain binocular vision. Since binocul...
When we track an object moving in depth, our eyes rotate in opposite directions. This type of “disju...