Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We show here that monkeys are a suitable model for studying the neurophysiology governing these modulations of microsaccades. Using various cue-target saccade tasks, we observed the effects of visual and auditory cues on microsaccades in monkeys. As in human studies, following visual cues there was an early bias in cue-congruent microsaccades followed by a later bias in cue-incongruent microsaccades. Following auditory cues there was a cue-incongruent bias in left cues only. In a separate experiment, we observed that brainstem omnipause neurons, which gate all saccades, also paused during microsaccade generation. Thus, we provide evidence that at l...
International audienceDuring fixation, the eyes are not still but often exhibit microsaccadic moveme...
Microsaccades are the largest and fastest of the fixational eye movements, which are involuntary eye...
Microsaccades (MSs) are the largest “fixational” eye movements, but their role in visual perception ...
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We sho...
The use of awake, fixating monkeys in neuroscience has allowed significant advances in understanding...
SummaryNeuronal response gain enhancement is a classic signature of the allocation of covert visual ...
Microsaccades are miniature saccades occurring once or twice per second during visual fixation. Whil...
The spatial location indicated by a visual cue can bias microsaccades directions towards or away fro...
AbstractMicrosaccades, or tiny eye movements that take place during periods of fixation, have long b...
Saccadic eye movements in primates continually shift the location at which a given stimulus strikes ...
Fixations consist of small movements including microsaccades, i.e., rapid flicks in eye position tha...
Microsaccades, small saccadic eye movements made during fixation, might accompany shifts of visual a...
Microsaccades that occur during periods of fixation are modulated by various cognitive processes and...
AbstractFixational eye movements are subdivided into tremor, drift, and microsaccades. All three typ...
Saccadic suppression, a behavioral phenomenon in which perceptual thresholds are elevated before, du...
International audienceDuring fixation, the eyes are not still but often exhibit microsaccadic moveme...
Microsaccades are the largest and fastest of the fixational eye movements, which are involuntary eye...
Microsaccades (MSs) are the largest “fixational” eye movements, but their role in visual perception ...
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We sho...
The use of awake, fixating monkeys in neuroscience has allowed significant advances in understanding...
SummaryNeuronal response gain enhancement is a classic signature of the allocation of covert visual ...
Microsaccades are miniature saccades occurring once or twice per second during visual fixation. Whil...
The spatial location indicated by a visual cue can bias microsaccades directions towards or away fro...
AbstractMicrosaccades, or tiny eye movements that take place during periods of fixation, have long b...
Saccadic eye movements in primates continually shift the location at which a given stimulus strikes ...
Fixations consist of small movements including microsaccades, i.e., rapid flicks in eye position tha...
Microsaccades, small saccadic eye movements made during fixation, might accompany shifts of visual a...
Microsaccades that occur during periods of fixation are modulated by various cognitive processes and...
AbstractFixational eye movements are subdivided into tremor, drift, and microsaccades. All three typ...
Saccadic suppression, a behavioral phenomenon in which perceptual thresholds are elevated before, du...
International audienceDuring fixation, the eyes are not still but often exhibit microsaccadic moveme...
Microsaccades are the largest and fastest of the fixational eye movements, which are involuntary eye...
Microsaccades (MSs) are the largest “fixational” eye movements, but their role in visual perception ...