AbstractWe examined the effect of gap-overlap stimuli on the distribution of latencies for pure saccades, pure vergence and combined saccades and vergence in three normal subjects. With the gap stimulus, a distinct peak of “express saccades” occurred, both with and without associated vergence, but a distinct “express vergence” response was not identified. Nevertheless, with the gap stimulus there was a decrease in vergence latencies (17 msec), but less so than for saccades (41 msec). In the combined paradigm the gap effects on saccades and vergence resembled those for each component made alone. In addition, the latencies of the saccade and vergence components were linearly correlated with an average slope of 0.5. To explain these results we...
AbstractIn a natural environment, saccade and vergence eye movements shift gaze in different directi...
The eye produces saccadic eye movements which show the shortest reaction times in humans. Saccade la...
AbstractTurning off a fixation point prior to or coincident with the appearance of a visual target r...
AbstractWe examined the effect of gap-overlap stimuli on the distribution of latencies for pure sacc...
the gap task, Wxation point switches oV and target appears after a gap period; in the overlap task, ...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements generated in response to a gap paradigm in which the fixation light s...
during saccades. Simulations ofthese modelilead to a number of I. We recorded eye movements in four ...
In a gap paradigm, healthy adult subjects performed visually triggered saccades to peripheral target...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
The present study was designed to evaluate whether fixation point offsets have the same effects on t...
International audienceThroughout the day, humans react to multisensory events conveying both visual ...
AbstractThe gap effect refers to a reduction in the latency of saccades to peripherally appearing ta...
To examine the neural correlates of contextually differing control mechanisms in saccade initiation,...
AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap b...
If two targets are carefully aligned so that they fall along the cyclopean axis, the required eye mo...
AbstractIn a natural environment, saccade and vergence eye movements shift gaze in different directi...
The eye produces saccadic eye movements which show the shortest reaction times in humans. Saccade la...
AbstractTurning off a fixation point prior to or coincident with the appearance of a visual target r...
AbstractWe examined the effect of gap-overlap stimuli on the distribution of latencies for pure sacc...
the gap task, Wxation point switches oV and target appears after a gap period; in the overlap task, ...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements generated in response to a gap paradigm in which the fixation light s...
during saccades. Simulations ofthese modelilead to a number of I. We recorded eye movements in four ...
In a gap paradigm, healthy adult subjects performed visually triggered saccades to peripheral target...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
The present study was designed to evaluate whether fixation point offsets have the same effects on t...
International audienceThroughout the day, humans react to multisensory events conveying both visual ...
AbstractThe gap effect refers to a reduction in the latency of saccades to peripherally appearing ta...
To examine the neural correlates of contextually differing control mechanisms in saccade initiation,...
AbstractThe initiation of both pursuit and saccades was affected by the presence of a temporal gap b...
If two targets are carefully aligned so that they fall along the cyclopean axis, the required eye mo...
AbstractIn a natural environment, saccade and vergence eye movements shift gaze in different directi...
The eye produces saccadic eye movements which show the shortest reaction times in humans. Saccade la...
AbstractTurning off a fixation point prior to or coincident with the appearance of a visual target r...