SummaryWhen viewing natural scenes saccadic eye movements are used to position retinal images of interest on the fovea, while vergence eye movements act to minimise retinal disparity and maintain a single binocular view of the target. Despite these disruptions to the retinal image, we perceive a stable visual world due to suppression of the magnocellular visual pathway which processes low spatial frequency target details [1]. Retinal image clarity is maintained by the mechanism of accommodation, which changes ocular power to produce sharp retinal images of objects at different viewing distances [2]. During abrupt dynamic changes in accommodation, visual suppression seems to occur as image degradation is rarely reported. Here, we report dire...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
Accommodation is the process by which the eye lens changes optical power to maintain a clear retinal...
Visual stability refers to the apparent stability of the visual world given the displacement of reti...
SummaryWhen viewing natural scenes saccadic eye movements are used to position retinal images of int...
VISUAL scientists have long sought to explain why the world remains stable during saccades, the ball...
Visual sensitivity, probed through perceptual detectability of very brief visual stimuli, is strongl...
Visual perception remains stable across saccadic eye movements, despite the concurrent strongly disr...
Our eyes are constantly in motion. Even during visual fixation, small eye movements continually jitt...
Introspection makes it clear that we do not see the visual motion generated by our saccadic eye move...
In normal vision our gaze leaps from detail to detail, resulting in rapid image motion across the re...
AbstractVisual suppression of low-spatial frequency information during eye movements is believed to ...
Humans and other primates perform multiple fast eye movements per second in order to redirect gaze ...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
During periods of steady fixation, we make small amplitude ocular movements, termed microsaccades, a...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
Accommodation is the process by which the eye lens changes optical power to maintain a clear retinal...
Visual stability refers to the apparent stability of the visual world given the displacement of reti...
SummaryWhen viewing natural scenes saccadic eye movements are used to position retinal images of int...
VISUAL scientists have long sought to explain why the world remains stable during saccades, the ball...
Visual sensitivity, probed through perceptual detectability of very brief visual stimuli, is strongl...
Visual perception remains stable across saccadic eye movements, despite the concurrent strongly disr...
Our eyes are constantly in motion. Even during visual fixation, small eye movements continually jitt...
Introspection makes it clear that we do not see the visual motion generated by our saccadic eye move...
In normal vision our gaze leaps from detail to detail, resulting in rapid image motion across the re...
AbstractVisual suppression of low-spatial frequency information during eye movements is believed to ...
Humans and other primates perform multiple fast eye movements per second in order to redirect gaze ...
Saccades are fast eye movements that reorient gaze. They can be performed voluntarily—for example, w...
The perceptual consequences of eye movements are manifold: Each large saccade is accompanied by a dr...
During periods of steady fixation, we make small amplitude ocular movements, termed microsaccades, a...
During visual exploration of a natural scene, saccades must be used to direct the fovea to areas of ...
Accommodation is the process by which the eye lens changes optical power to maintain a clear retinal...
Visual stability refers to the apparent stability of the visual world given the displacement of reti...