We show that the initial ocular following responses elicited by motion of a large pattern are modestly attenuated when that pattern is shifted out of the plane of fixation by altering its binocular disparity. If the motion is applied to only restricted regions of the pattern, however, then altering the disparity of those regions severely attenuates their ability to generate ocular following. This sensitivity of the ocular tracking mechanism to local binocular disparity would help the observer who moves through a cluttered 3-D world to stabilize objects in the plane of fixation and ignore all others. © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
International audienceWith the scleral search coil technique, we recorded ocular following responses...
International audienceWith the scleral search coil technique, we recorded ocular following responses...
AbstractWe show that the initial ocular following responses elicited by motion of a large pattern ar...
AbstractWe show that the initial ocular following responses elicited by motion of a large pattern ar...
AbstractA previous study showed that the initial ocular following responses elicited by sudden motio...
Ocular following responses (OFRs) are tracking eye movements elicited at ultrashort latency by the s...
AbstractSmall disparity stimuli applied to large random-dot patterns elicit machine-like vergence ey...
Small disparity stimuli applied to large random-dot patterns elicit machine-like vergence eye moveme...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
Do relative binocular disparities guide our movements in depth? In order to find out we asked subjec...
International audienceIn human and nonhuman primates, reflexive tracking eye movements can be initia...
The human eyes are always moving. Even during periods of fixation when visual information is acquire...
International audienceIn human and nonhuman primates, reflexive tracking eye movements can be initia...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
International audienceWith the scleral search coil technique, we recorded ocular following responses...
International audienceWith the scleral search coil technique, we recorded ocular following responses...
AbstractWe show that the initial ocular following responses elicited by motion of a large pattern ar...
AbstractWe show that the initial ocular following responses elicited by motion of a large pattern ar...
AbstractA previous study showed that the initial ocular following responses elicited by sudden motio...
Ocular following responses (OFRs) are tracking eye movements elicited at ultrashort latency by the s...
AbstractSmall disparity stimuli applied to large random-dot patterns elicit machine-like vergence ey...
Small disparity stimuli applied to large random-dot patterns elicit machine-like vergence eye moveme...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
Do relative binocular disparities guide our movements in depth? In order to find out we asked subjec...
International audienceIn human and nonhuman primates, reflexive tracking eye movements can be initia...
The human eyes are always moving. Even during periods of fixation when visual information is acquire...
International audienceIn human and nonhuman primates, reflexive tracking eye movements can be initia...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
International audienceWith the scleral search coil technique, we recorded ocular following responses...
International audienceWith the scleral search coil technique, we recorded ocular following responses...