AbstractFixational eye movements are subdivided into tremor, drift, and microsaccades. All three types of miniature eye movements generate small random displacements of the retinal image when viewing a stationary scene. Here we investigate the modulation of microsaccades by shifts of covert attention in a classical spatial cueing paradigm. First, we replicate the suppression of microsaccades with a minimum rate about 150 ms after cue onset. Second, as a new finding we observe microsaccadic enhancement with a maximum rate about 350 ms after presentation of the cue. Third, we find a modulation of the orientation towards the cue direction. These multiple influences of visual attention on microsaccades accentuate their role for visual informati...
A substantial question in understanding expert behavior is isolating where experts look, and which a...
Microsaccades are miniature saccades occurring once or twice per second during visual fixation. Whil...
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We sho...
AbstractFixational eye movements are subdivided into tremor, drift, and microsaccades. All three typ...
Microsaccades, or tiny eye movements that take place during periods of fixation, have long been thou...
Microsaccade rate during fixation is modulated by the presentation of a visual stimulus. When the st...
paradigm to map the redistribution of spatial attention in response to a peripherally flashed cue. T...
AbstractWe compared effects of covert spatial-attention shifts induced with exogenous or endogenous ...
In this dissertation, we investigate the relationship between visual attention and eye movement pro...
AbstractMicrosaccades, or tiny eye movements that take place during periods of fixation, have long b...
Covert spatial attention is associated with spatial modulation of neural activity as well as with di...
Tse, Sheinberg, and Logothetis (2003) exploited a 'change blindness ' paradigm to map the ...
During visual fixation, our eyes are not entirely still. Instead, small eye movements, such as micro...
The debate about the nature of fixational eye movements has revived recently with the claim that mic...
Eyes never stop moving. Even when asked to maintain the eyes at fixation, the oculomotor system prod...
A substantial question in understanding expert behavior is isolating where experts look, and which a...
Microsaccades are miniature saccades occurring once or twice per second during visual fixation. Whil...
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We sho...
AbstractFixational eye movements are subdivided into tremor, drift, and microsaccades. All three typ...
Microsaccades, or tiny eye movements that take place during periods of fixation, have long been thou...
Microsaccade rate during fixation is modulated by the presentation of a visual stimulus. When the st...
paradigm to map the redistribution of spatial attention in response to a peripherally flashed cue. T...
AbstractWe compared effects of covert spatial-attention shifts induced with exogenous or endogenous ...
In this dissertation, we investigate the relationship between visual attention and eye movement pro...
AbstractMicrosaccades, or tiny eye movements that take place during periods of fixation, have long b...
Covert spatial attention is associated with spatial modulation of neural activity as well as with di...
Tse, Sheinberg, and Logothetis (2003) exploited a 'change blindness ' paradigm to map the ...
During visual fixation, our eyes are not entirely still. Instead, small eye movements, such as micro...
The debate about the nature of fixational eye movements has revived recently with the claim that mic...
Eyes never stop moving. Even when asked to maintain the eyes at fixation, the oculomotor system prod...
A substantial question in understanding expert behavior is isolating where experts look, and which a...
Microsaccades are miniature saccades occurring once or twice per second during visual fixation. Whil...
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We sho...