The authors present an approach to the coordination of eye movements and locomotion in naturalistic steering tasks. It is based on recent empirical research, in particular, on driver eye movements, that poses challenges for existing accounts of how we visually steer a course. They first analyze how the ideas of feedback and feedforward processes and internal models are treated in control theoretical steering models within vision science and engineering, which share an underlying architecture but have historically developed in very separate ways. The authors then show how these traditions can be naturally (re)integrated with each other and with contemporary neuroscience, to better understand the skill and gaze strategies involved. They then ...
Some motor tasks can be completed, quite literally, with our eyes shut. Most people can touch their ...
Gaze control is largely determined by an observer's behavioral goals. In this respect, eye movements...
Moving eyes and head to orient the visual axis to a point of interest is a routine movement for fove...
The authors present an approach to the coordination of eye movements and locomotion in naturalistic ...
The authors present an approach to the coordination of eye movements and locomotion in naturalistic ...
When steering a trajectory, we direct our gaze to locations (1–3 s ahead) that we want to steer thro...
A major unresolved question in understanding visually guided locomotion in humans is whether actions...
The authors examined observers steering through a series of obstacles to determine the role of activ...
In 1958, JJ Gibson put forward proposals on the visual control of locomotion. Research in the last 5...
Eyes and hand movements are known to be coordinated during a variety of tasks. While steering a vehi...
© 2016 American Psychological Association. Responding to changes in the road ahead is essential for ...
Some motor tasks can be completed, quite literally, with our eyes shut. Most people can touch their ...
Eyes and hand movements are known to be coordinated during a variety of tasks. While steering a vehi...
The contribution of retinal flow (RF), extraretinal (ER), and egocentric visual direction (VD) infor...
A simple control theoretic model of human steering or control activity in the lateral-directional co...
Some motor tasks can be completed, quite literally, with our eyes shut. Most people can touch their ...
Gaze control is largely determined by an observer's behavioral goals. In this respect, eye movements...
Moving eyes and head to orient the visual axis to a point of interest is a routine movement for fove...
The authors present an approach to the coordination of eye movements and locomotion in naturalistic ...
The authors present an approach to the coordination of eye movements and locomotion in naturalistic ...
When steering a trajectory, we direct our gaze to locations (1–3 s ahead) that we want to steer thro...
A major unresolved question in understanding visually guided locomotion in humans is whether actions...
The authors examined observers steering through a series of obstacles to determine the role of activ...
In 1958, JJ Gibson put forward proposals on the visual control of locomotion. Research in the last 5...
Eyes and hand movements are known to be coordinated during a variety of tasks. While steering a vehi...
© 2016 American Psychological Association. Responding to changes in the road ahead is essential for ...
Some motor tasks can be completed, quite literally, with our eyes shut. Most people can touch their ...
Eyes and hand movements are known to be coordinated during a variety of tasks. While steering a vehi...
The contribution of retinal flow (RF), extraretinal (ER), and egocentric visual direction (VD) infor...
A simple control theoretic model of human steering or control activity in the lateral-directional co...
Some motor tasks can be completed, quite literally, with our eyes shut. Most people can touch their ...
Gaze control is largely determined by an observer's behavioral goals. In this respect, eye movements...
Moving eyes and head to orient the visual axis to a point of interest is a routine movement for fove...