The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a drop of sensitivity to luminance-contrast, low-frequency stimuli, impacting both conscious vision and involuntary responses, including pupillary constrictions. They also produce transient distortions of space, time, and number, which cannot be attributed to the mere motion on the retinae. All these are signs that the visual system evokes active processes to predict and counteract the consequences of saccades. We propose that a key mechanism is the reorganization of spatiotemporal visual fields, which transiently increases the temporal and spatial uncertainty of visual representations just before and during saccades. On one hand, this accounts f...
AbstractRapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent y...
We frequently reposition our gaze by making rapid ballistic eye movements that are called saccades. ...
We frequently reposition our gaze by making rapid ballistic eye movements that are called saccades. ...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
We actively scan our environment with fast ballistic movements called saccades, which create large a...
AbstractTo interact rapidly and effectively with our environment, our brain needs access to a dynami...
Eye movements pose major problems to the visual system, because each new saccade changes the mapping...
As the neural representation of visual information is initially coded in retinotopic coordinates, ey...
Humans and other primates perform multiple fast eye movements per second in order to redirect gaze ...
How vision operates efficiently in the face of continuous shifts of gaze remains poorly understood. ...
Action and perception are intimately coupled systems. One clear case is saccadic suppression, the re...
Humans and other primates perform multiple fast eye movements per second in order to redirect gaze ...
AbstractWhile saccadic eye movements produce rapid shift of images of objects on the retina, the vis...
SummaryHumans make several eye movements every second, and thus a fundamental challenge in conscious...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
AbstractRapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent y...
We frequently reposition our gaze by making rapid ballistic eye movements that are called saccades. ...
We frequently reposition our gaze by making rapid ballistic eye movements that are called saccades. ...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
We actively scan our environment with fast ballistic movements called saccades, which create large a...
AbstractTo interact rapidly and effectively with our environment, our brain needs access to a dynami...
Eye movements pose major problems to the visual system, because each new saccade changes the mapping...
As the neural representation of visual information is initially coded in retinotopic coordinates, ey...
Humans and other primates perform multiple fast eye movements per second in order to redirect gaze ...
How vision operates efficiently in the face of continuous shifts of gaze remains poorly understood. ...
Action and perception are intimately coupled systems. One clear case is saccadic suppression, the re...
Humans and other primates perform multiple fast eye movements per second in order to redirect gaze ...
AbstractWhile saccadic eye movements produce rapid shift of images of objects on the retina, the vis...
SummaryHumans make several eye movements every second, and thus a fundamental challenge in conscious...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
AbstractRapid eye movements (saccades) induce visual misperceptions. A number of studies in recent y...
We frequently reposition our gaze by making rapid ballistic eye movements that are called saccades. ...
We frequently reposition our gaze by making rapid ballistic eye movements that are called saccades. ...