AbstractThe threshold for detection of displacements of visual objects is higher during voluntary saccades than it is during steady gaze (“saccadic suppression of displacement”; SSD). Relative contributions to SSD of extraretinal and retinal factors were investigated by measuring displacement thresholds in four experiments in which three observers judged whether a test flash, presented after a saccade or a period of fixation, was located to the left or right of a reference point viewed earlier. The experiments, involving saccades ranging from 4 to 12 deg in length, separated the effects of saccade size from the effects of retinal eccentricity of the reference point, and also separated the effects of retinal eccentricity of the test flash fr...
Saccades rapidly jerk the eye into new positions, yet we rarely experience the motion streaks impose...
During saccadic eye movements, the processing of visual information is transiently interrupted by a ...
It has generally thought that information from the eyes is made available during a fixation, but not...
To establish a perceptually stable world despite the large retinal shifts caused by saccadic eye mov...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
The human eye-movement system is equipped with a sophisticated updating mechanism that can adjust fo...
Retinal image displacements caused by saccadic eye movements are generally unnoticed. Recent theorie...
AbstractDisplacement of a visual target during a saccadic eye movement is normally detected only at ...
We measured the time course of saccadic suppression and tested whether suppression results entirely ...
Visual stimuli presented just before or during an eye movement are more difficult to detect than tho...
AbstractIn a previous paper we compared eye globe records of saccadic eye movements (recorded with a...
The effects on visual thresholds of active displacement of the peripheral retinal image (produced by...
AbstractThe perception of image smear for a target flashed during a saccade is attenuated if the tar...
Visual sensitivity, probed through perceptual detectability of very brief visual stimuli, is strongl...
Saccades rapidly jerk the eye into new positions, yet we rarely experience the motion streaks impose...
During saccadic eye movements, the processing of visual information is transiently interrupted by a ...
It has generally thought that information from the eyes is made available during a fixation, but not...
To establish a perceptually stable world despite the large retinal shifts caused by saccadic eye mov...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
The human eye-movement system is equipped with a sophisticated updating mechanism that can adjust fo...
Retinal image displacements caused by saccadic eye movements are generally unnoticed. Recent theorie...
AbstractDisplacement of a visual target during a saccadic eye movement is normally detected only at ...
We measured the time course of saccadic suppression and tested whether suppression results entirely ...
Visual stimuli presented just before or during an eye movement are more difficult to detect than tho...
AbstractIn a previous paper we compared eye globe records of saccadic eye movements (recorded with a...
The effects on visual thresholds of active displacement of the peripheral retinal image (produced by...
AbstractThe perception of image smear for a target flashed during a saccade is attenuated if the tar...
Visual sensitivity, probed through perceptual detectability of very brief visual stimuli, is strongl...
Saccades rapidly jerk the eye into new positions, yet we rarely experience the motion streaks impose...
During saccadic eye movements, the processing of visual information is transiently interrupted by a ...
It has generally thought that information from the eyes is made available during a fixation, but not...