Previous work on ocular-following emphasises the accuracy of tracking eye movements. However, a more complete understanding of oculomotor control should account for variable error as well. We identify two forms of precision: ‘shake’, occurring over shorter timescales; ‘drift’, occurring over longer timescales. We show how these can be computed across a series of eye movements (e.g. a sequence of slow-phases or collection of pursuit trials) and then measure accuracy and precision for younger and older observers executing different types of eye movement. Overall, we found older observers were less accurate over a range of stimulus speeds and less precise at faster eye speeds. Accuracy declined more steeply for reflexive eye movements and shak...
Age is known to affect sensitivity to retinal motion. However, little is known about how age might a...
Peripheral-motion-change-detection performance was examined by contrasting a fixation with a SPEM co...
Rapid orientating movements of the eyes are believed to be controlled ballistically. The mechanism u...
Previous work on ocular-following emphasises the accuracy of tracking eye movements. However, a more...
Purpose: Small moving targets are followed by pursuit eye movements, with success ubiquitously defin...
A moving target is visually tracked with a combination of smooth pursuit and saccades. Human visual ...
Smooth pursuit over a textured background introduces full-field motion to the retinal image in the d...
Human eye movements are stereotyped and repeatable, but how specific to a normal individual are the ...
The present study investigated how eye movements were associated with performance accuracy during si...
International audiencePrevious studies on smooth pursuit eye movements have shown that humans can co...
Eye-tracking experiments rely heavily on good data quality of eye-trackers. Unfortunately, it is oft...
We recorded the smooth pursuit eye movements (SPEM) of 52 healthy subjects by binocular electrooculo...
The present study investigated the reliability and susceptibility to practice effects of oculomotor ...
The effects of aging on eye movements are well studied in the laboratory. Increased saccade latencie...
AbstractGaze following is the basis of joint visual attention. We investigated the capability of hum...
Age is known to affect sensitivity to retinal motion. However, little is known about how age might a...
Peripheral-motion-change-detection performance was examined by contrasting a fixation with a SPEM co...
Rapid orientating movements of the eyes are believed to be controlled ballistically. The mechanism u...
Previous work on ocular-following emphasises the accuracy of tracking eye movements. However, a more...
Purpose: Small moving targets are followed by pursuit eye movements, with success ubiquitously defin...
A moving target is visually tracked with a combination of smooth pursuit and saccades. Human visual ...
Smooth pursuit over a textured background introduces full-field motion to the retinal image in the d...
Human eye movements are stereotyped and repeatable, but how specific to a normal individual are the ...
The present study investigated how eye movements were associated with performance accuracy during si...
International audiencePrevious studies on smooth pursuit eye movements have shown that humans can co...
Eye-tracking experiments rely heavily on good data quality of eye-trackers. Unfortunately, it is oft...
We recorded the smooth pursuit eye movements (SPEM) of 52 healthy subjects by binocular electrooculo...
The present study investigated the reliability and susceptibility to practice effects of oculomotor ...
The effects of aging on eye movements are well studied in the laboratory. Increased saccade latencie...
AbstractGaze following is the basis of joint visual attention. We investigated the capability of hum...
Age is known to affect sensitivity to retinal motion. However, little is known about how age might a...
Peripheral-motion-change-detection performance was examined by contrasting a fixation with a SPEM co...
Rapid orientating movements of the eyes are believed to be controlled ballistically. The mechanism u...