SummaryHumans and other species continually perform microscopic eye movements, even when attending to a single point [1–3]. These movements, which include drifts and microsaccades, are under oculomotor control [2, 4, 5], elicit strong neural responses [6–11], and have been thought to serve important functions [12–16]. The influence of these fixational eye movements on the acquisition and neural processing of visual information remains unclear. Here, we show that during viewing of natural scenes, microscopic eye movements carry out a crucial information-processing step: they remove predictable correlations in natural scenes by equalizing the spatial power of the retinal image within the frequency range of ganglion cells' peak sensitivity. Th...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
Tse, Sheinberg, and Logothetis (2003) exploited a 'change blindness ' paradigm to map the ...
SummaryHumans and other species continually perform microscopic eye movements, even when attending t...
Our eyes are constantly in motion. Even during visual fixation, small eye movements continually jitt...
Our eyes are always in motion. Even when we attempt to maintain steady gaze, fixational eye movemen...
The effects of context on visual sensitivity are well established (e.g., sensitivity to luminance fl...
Microsaccades are miniature involuntary eye movements which occur even during fixation. The rate of ...
Vision is not a static process. Our perception of the world is not merely a sequence of fixed snapsh...
The effects of context on visual sensitivity are well established (e.g., sensitivity to luminance fl...
Microsaccade rate during fixation is modulated by the presentation of a visual stimulus. When the st...
Fixation, holding one\u27s eyes on an object, plays a key role in the perception of visual scenes. T...
Natural vision is a highly dynamic process. Frequent body, head, and eye movements constantly bring ...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
Tse, Sheinberg, and Logothetis (2003) exploited a 'change blindness ' paradigm to map the ...
SummaryHumans and other species continually perform microscopic eye movements, even when attending t...
Our eyes are constantly in motion. Even during visual fixation, small eye movements continually jitt...
Our eyes are always in motion. Even when we attempt to maintain steady gaze, fixational eye movemen...
The effects of context on visual sensitivity are well established (e.g., sensitivity to luminance fl...
Microsaccades are miniature involuntary eye movements which occur even during fixation. The rate of ...
Vision is not a static process. Our perception of the world is not merely a sequence of fixed snapsh...
The effects of context on visual sensitivity are well established (e.g., sensitivity to luminance fl...
Microsaccade rate during fixation is modulated by the presentation of a visual stimulus. When the st...
Fixation, holding one\u27s eyes on an object, plays a key role in the perception of visual scenes. T...
Natural vision is a highly dynamic process. Frequent body, head, and eye movements constantly bring ...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
International audienceIt is now reasonably well established that microsaccades (MS) enhance visual p...
Tse, Sheinberg, and Logothetis (2003) exploited a 'change blindness ' paradigm to map the ...