AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap between the disappearance of a fixated visual target and the appearance of a second, eccentric, target. For pursuit, the gap paradigm produced a modest (20 msec) decrease in latency. For saccades, the gap paradigm produced a similar modest decrease in the latency of some saccades, but also revealed a population of very short latency “express” saccades. The modest changes in the latency of pursuit and regular saccades displayed a similar dependence on gap duration, with the largest decreases produced by gaps of 200–300 msec. The gap paradigm did not produce “express” pursuit, even though express saccades could be elicited on interleaved trials....
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
International audienceTriggering a saccade toward a static visual target depends upon spatial attrib...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
The initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap between t...
AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap b...
I. The reduction in saccadic reaction time associated with the introduction of a period of darkness ...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements generated in response to a gap paradigm in which the fixation light s...
To examine the effects of smooth pursuit eye movements on the initiation of saccades, their latency ...
AbstractThe first goal of this study was to systematically document asymmetries in vertical saccade ...
When monkeys are presented simultaneously with multiple stimuli, they can make one of two types of r...
Experiments with the Rashbass ‘step-ramp’ paradigm have revealed that the initial catchup saccade th...
The gap paradigm often promotes the occurrence of express saccades, which are supposed to be short l...
During visual tracking of a moving stimulus, primates orient their visual axis by combining two very...
AbstractIt has been demonstrated that in gap pursuit tasks, smooth pursuit latency is reduced. This ...
AbstractCan a release of attention from fixation help explain the saccadic ‘gap effect’, the shorten...
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
International audienceTriggering a saccade toward a static visual target depends upon spatial attrib...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
The initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap between t...
AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap b...
I. The reduction in saccadic reaction time associated with the introduction of a period of darkness ...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements generated in response to a gap paradigm in which the fixation light s...
To examine the effects of smooth pursuit eye movements on the initiation of saccades, their latency ...
AbstractThe first goal of this study was to systematically document asymmetries in vertical saccade ...
When monkeys are presented simultaneously with multiple stimuli, they can make one of two types of r...
Experiments with the Rashbass ‘step-ramp’ paradigm have revealed that the initial catchup saccade th...
The gap paradigm often promotes the occurrence of express saccades, which are supposed to be short l...
During visual tracking of a moving stimulus, primates orient their visual axis by combining two very...
AbstractIt has been demonstrated that in gap pursuit tasks, smooth pursuit latency is reduced. This ...
AbstractCan a release of attention from fixation help explain the saccadic ‘gap effect’, the shorten...
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
International audienceTriggering a saccade toward a static visual target depends upon spatial attrib...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...