To clearly view approaching objects, the eyes rotate inward (vergence), and the intraocular lenses focus (accommodation). Current ocular control models assume both eyes are driven by unitary vergence and unitary accommodation commands that causally interact. The models typically describe discrete gaze shifts to non-accommodative targets performed under laboratory conditions. We probe these unitary signals using a physical stimulus moving in depth on the midline while recording vergence and accommodation simultaneously from both eyes in normal observers. Using monocular viewing, retinal disparity is removed, leaving only monocular cues for interpreting the object's motion in depth. The viewing eye always followed the target's motion. However...
When an opaque object occludes a more distant object, the two eyes often see different parts of the ...
Accommodation of the human eye relies on multiple factors and visual cues that include object size, ...
AbstractWhen an opaque object occludes a more distant object, the two eyes often see different parts...
When we track an object moving in depth, our eyes rotate in opposite directions. This type of “disju...
AbstractWith the broader use of stereoscopic displays, a flurry of research activity about the accom...
Linke L, Horstmann G. How vergence influences the perception of being looked at. Perception. 2022;51...
AbstractWhen a target travels slowly and smoothly along the line of sight of one eye, the eye that i...
Induced motion is the false impression that physically stationary objects move when in the presence ...
AbstractWe studied gaze-shift dynamics during several gaze-shift tasks and during reading, in five s...
AbstractThis paper describes the spatial trajectories of the binocular fixation point (the intersect...
Fisher and Ciuffreda (1988) and Mon-Williams and Tresilian (1999) reported that, without vergence cu...
The human eyes are always moving. Even during periods of fixation when visual information is acquire...
It is well established that a synkinetic relationship exists between the accommodation and vergence ...
textabstractHorizontal binocular eye movements of four subjects were recorded with the scleral senso...
Humans and many animals make frequent saccades requiring coordinated movements of the eyes. When lan...
When an opaque object occludes a more distant object, the two eyes often see different parts of the ...
Accommodation of the human eye relies on multiple factors and visual cues that include object size, ...
AbstractWhen an opaque object occludes a more distant object, the two eyes often see different parts...
When we track an object moving in depth, our eyes rotate in opposite directions. This type of “disju...
AbstractWith the broader use of stereoscopic displays, a flurry of research activity about the accom...
Linke L, Horstmann G. How vergence influences the perception of being looked at. Perception. 2022;51...
AbstractWhen a target travels slowly and smoothly along the line of sight of one eye, the eye that i...
Induced motion is the false impression that physically stationary objects move when in the presence ...
AbstractWe studied gaze-shift dynamics during several gaze-shift tasks and during reading, in five s...
AbstractThis paper describes the spatial trajectories of the binocular fixation point (the intersect...
Fisher and Ciuffreda (1988) and Mon-Williams and Tresilian (1999) reported that, without vergence cu...
The human eyes are always moving. Even during periods of fixation when visual information is acquire...
It is well established that a synkinetic relationship exists between the accommodation and vergence ...
textabstractHorizontal binocular eye movements of four subjects were recorded with the scleral senso...
Humans and many animals make frequent saccades requiring coordinated movements of the eyes. When lan...
When an opaque object occludes a more distant object, the two eyes often see different parts of the ...
Accommodation of the human eye relies on multiple factors and visual cues that include object size, ...
AbstractWhen an opaque object occludes a more distant object, the two eyes often see different parts...