AbstractVisual search for a line-element target differing sufficiently in orientation from a background of line elements can be performed rapidly, effortlessly, and without eye movements. There is, however, a response asymmetry: detection is better with an oblique target element in vertical or horizontal background elements than when these orientations are interchanged. If the underlying visual mechanisms also provide an input to the oculomotor system, then a similar asymmetry should be observed in eye-movement behaviour. To test this hypothesis, an experiment was undertaken in which eye movements were recorded while subjects searched for a line-element target in background of line elements; orientations were chosen from the range 0°, 30°, ...
AbstractIf two targets are both on the visual axis of one eye or the other, and binocular fixation i...
Eye movements were recorded from three subjects as they initiated tracking of a small circle (“targe...
The accuracy of saccade localisation during visual search was examined for a search target defined b...
AbstractVisual search for a line-element target differing sufficiently in orientation from a backgro...
The human visual system is remarkably adept at finding objects of interest in cluttered visual envir...
AbstractPerceptual performance has been known to change around the time of saccadic eye movement. In...
Visual search can simply be defined as the task of looking for objects of interest in cluttered visu...
AbstractFive experiments are reported in which eye movements were recorded while subjects carried ou...
AbstractPre-saccadic fixation durations associated with saccades directed in different directions we...
AbstractThe degree of selectivity or guidance underlying search was tested by having subjects search...
The extent to which the preparation of an eye movement and spatial attention both independentlyinflu...
Saccadic eye movements, which rapidly and accurately guide our gaze from one point of interest to an...
Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneg...
Saccadic latencies to targets appearing to the left and right of fixation in a repeating sequence ar...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
AbstractIf two targets are both on the visual axis of one eye or the other, and binocular fixation i...
Eye movements were recorded from three subjects as they initiated tracking of a small circle (“targe...
The accuracy of saccade localisation during visual search was examined for a search target defined b...
AbstractVisual search for a line-element target differing sufficiently in orientation from a backgro...
The human visual system is remarkably adept at finding objects of interest in cluttered visual envir...
AbstractPerceptual performance has been known to change around the time of saccadic eye movement. In...
Visual search can simply be defined as the task of looking for objects of interest in cluttered visu...
AbstractFive experiments are reported in which eye movements were recorded while subjects carried ou...
AbstractPre-saccadic fixation durations associated with saccades directed in different directions we...
AbstractThe degree of selectivity or guidance underlying search was tested by having subjects search...
The extent to which the preparation of an eye movement and spatial attention both independentlyinflu...
Saccadic eye movements, which rapidly and accurately guide our gaze from one point of interest to an...
Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneg...
Saccadic latencies to targets appearing to the left and right of fixation in a repeating sequence ar...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
AbstractIf two targets are both on the visual axis of one eye or the other, and binocular fixation i...
Eye movements were recorded from three subjects as they initiated tracking of a small circle (“targe...
The accuracy of saccade localisation during visual search was examined for a search target defined b...