I. The reduction in saccadic reaction time associated with the introduction of a period of darkness between the disappearance of an initial fixation point and the appearance of a new peripheral saccade target is known as the gap effect. Fixation cells in the rostra1 pole of the monkey superior colliculus have been implicated in the control of active visual fixation and suppressing saccadic eye movements. To determine whether specific variations of fixa-tion cell discharge was correlated to the gap effect, we recorded the activity of fixation cells while a monkey generated visually guided saccades with various temporal gaps between the disappear-ance of the initial fixation point and the appearance of a peripheral saccade target. 2. The sacc...
Performance in a reaction time task can be strongly influenced by the physical properties of the sti...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
AbstractThe ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the ...
The initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap between t...
AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap b...
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
An important property of our motor system is the ability to either perform or inhibit an automatic g...
The ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the natural ...
AbstractCan a release of attention from fixation help explain the saccadic ‘gap effect’, the shorten...
AbstractThe saccadic “gap effect” refers to a phenomenon whereby saccadic reaction times (SRTs) are ...
To examine the neural correlates of contextually differing control mechanisms in saccade initiation,...
ity in the primate superior colliculus depends on the presence of lo-cal landmarks at the saccade en...
AbstractThe gap effect refers to a reduction in the latency of saccades to peripherally appearing ta...
AbstractTurning off a fixation point prior to or coincident with the appearance of a visual target r...
The ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the natural ...
Performance in a reaction time task can be strongly influenced by the physical properties of the sti...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
AbstractThe ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the ...
The initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap between t...
AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap b...
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
An important property of our motor system is the ability to either perform or inhibit an automatic g...
The ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the natural ...
AbstractCan a release of attention from fixation help explain the saccadic ‘gap effect’, the shorten...
AbstractThe saccadic “gap effect” refers to a phenomenon whereby saccadic reaction times (SRTs) are ...
To examine the neural correlates of contextually differing control mechanisms in saccade initiation,...
ity in the primate superior colliculus depends on the presence of lo-cal landmarks at the saccade en...
AbstractThe gap effect refers to a reduction in the latency of saccades to peripherally appearing ta...
AbstractTurning off a fixation point prior to or coincident with the appearance of a visual target r...
The ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the natural ...
Performance in a reaction time task can be strongly influenced by the physical properties of the sti...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
AbstractThe ability of primates to make rapid and accurate saccadic eye movements for exploring the ...