AbstractRecently it has been suggested that, somehow similarly to visual saccadic suppression, saccades interrupt some mental activities. After demonstrating that spontaneous eye movements can be used to trace the instantaneous evolution of mental imagery, we show here that making a voluntary saccade or anti-saccade as a secondary task introduces a large delay in a concurrent motion imagery task. An identical task requiring a shift of attention but not saccades also delays imagery, though to a lesser extent. The delay is never compensated afterwards, as if the time dedicated to the secondary task was lost. In contrast, motion imagery is not delayed by spontaneous saccades that accompany imagery, as compared to a fixation condition. We concl...
We provide evidence that the saccadic system can simultaneously program two saccades to different go...
The saccadic distractor effect, in which irrelevant stimuli delay saccades to target stimuli, is a p...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...
AbstractRecently it has been suggested that, somehow similarly to visual saccadic suppression, sacca...
AbstractLaboratory tasks used to study vision and attention usually require steady fixation, while n...
How the brain maintains perceptual continuity across eye movements that yield discontinuous snapshot...
AbstractThis paper examines the nature of visual representations that direct ongoing performance in ...
This paper examines the nature of visual representations that direct ongoing performance in sensorim...
We move our eyes to explore the world, but visual areas determining where to look next (action) are ...
In action sequences, the eyes are generally fixated ahead of the stimulus being responded to, overla...
AbstractMental imagery is often considered to be an attentional state. We investigated whether imagi...
Many common activities, like reading, scanning scenes, or searching for an inconspicuous item in a c...
One of the more enduring mysteries of neuroscience is how the visual system constructs robust maps o...
One of the core mechanisms involved in the control of saccade responses to selected target stimuli i...
AbstractTasks such as reading or visual search consist of series of saccades. We have investigated t...
We provide evidence that the saccadic system can simultaneously program two saccades to different go...
The saccadic distractor effect, in which irrelevant stimuli delay saccades to target stimuli, is a p...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...
AbstractRecently it has been suggested that, somehow similarly to visual saccadic suppression, sacca...
AbstractLaboratory tasks used to study vision and attention usually require steady fixation, while n...
How the brain maintains perceptual continuity across eye movements that yield discontinuous snapshot...
AbstractThis paper examines the nature of visual representations that direct ongoing performance in ...
This paper examines the nature of visual representations that direct ongoing performance in sensorim...
We move our eyes to explore the world, but visual areas determining where to look next (action) are ...
In action sequences, the eyes are generally fixated ahead of the stimulus being responded to, overla...
AbstractMental imagery is often considered to be an attentional state. We investigated whether imagi...
Many common activities, like reading, scanning scenes, or searching for an inconspicuous item in a c...
One of the more enduring mysteries of neuroscience is how the visual system constructs robust maps o...
One of the core mechanisms involved in the control of saccade responses to selected target stimuli i...
AbstractTasks such as reading or visual search consist of series of saccades. We have investigated t...
We provide evidence that the saccadic system can simultaneously program two saccades to different go...
The saccadic distractor effect, in which irrelevant stimuli delay saccades to target stimuli, is a p...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...