AbstractHumans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes are needed to combine the two inputs into a unified percept of the text. Generally, slight vergence errors, i.e., fixation disparities, occur but do not cause double vision since disparate retinal inputs fall into Panum’s fusional area, that is, a range of disparity wherein sensory fusion of the two retinal images is achieved. In this study, we report benchmark data with respect to the mean magnitude and range of vertical compared to horizontal fixation disparities for natural reading. Our data clearly fit to an elliptical pattern of Panum’s fusional area that corresponds with theoretical estimates. Furthermore, when we examined disparity-driv...
AbstractIntra-fixation location changes were measured when one-line sentences written in lower or aL...
Reading comes with a clear binocular advantage, expressed in shorter fixation times and fewer regres...
Because our eyes are set apart horizontally in our head, most disparities between the retinal images...
AbstractHumans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes a...
Humans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes are neede...
Humans typically make use of both eyes during reading, which necessitates precise binocular coordina...
In this paper I present a brief review of some recent studies my colleagues and I have carried out t...
AbstractWe investigated the effective fusional range for written stimuli in children and adults in a...
We investigated the way in which binocular coordination in reading is affected by the spatial struct...
In our study, 14 subjects read 60 sentences from the Potsdam Sentence Corpus twice (viewing distance...
AbstractWe measured the ability to fuse dichoptic images of a horizontal line alone or in the presen...
Reading with two eyes necessitates efficient processes of binocular vision, which provide a single p...
AbstractBinocular coordination of the eyes during reading was examined. Fixation disparity greater t...
SummarySaccadic eye movements and fixations are the behavioral means by which we visually sample tex...
The present study employs a stereoscopic manipulation to present sentences in three dimensions to su...
AbstractIntra-fixation location changes were measured when one-line sentences written in lower or aL...
Reading comes with a clear binocular advantage, expressed in shorter fixation times and fewer regres...
Because our eyes are set apart horizontally in our head, most disparities between the retinal images...
AbstractHumans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes a...
Humans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes are neede...
Humans typically make use of both eyes during reading, which necessitates precise binocular coordina...
In this paper I present a brief review of some recent studies my colleagues and I have carried out t...
AbstractWe investigated the effective fusional range for written stimuli in children and adults in a...
We investigated the way in which binocular coordination in reading is affected by the spatial struct...
In our study, 14 subjects read 60 sentences from the Potsdam Sentence Corpus twice (viewing distance...
AbstractWe measured the ability to fuse dichoptic images of a horizontal line alone or in the presen...
Reading with two eyes necessitates efficient processes of binocular vision, which provide a single p...
AbstractBinocular coordination of the eyes during reading was examined. Fixation disparity greater t...
SummarySaccadic eye movements and fixations are the behavioral means by which we visually sample tex...
The present study employs a stereoscopic manipulation to present sentences in three dimensions to su...
AbstractIntra-fixation location changes were measured when one-line sentences written in lower or aL...
Reading comes with a clear binocular advantage, expressed in shorter fixation times and fewer regres...
Because our eyes are set apart horizontally in our head, most disparities between the retinal images...