AbstractSaccadic eye movements transiently distort perceptual space. Visual objects flashed shortly before or during a saccade are mislocalized along the saccade direction, resembling a compression of space around the saccade target. These mislocalizations reflect transient errors of processes that construct spatial stability across eye movements. They may arise from errors of reference signals associated with saccade direction and amplitude or from visual or visuomotor remapping processes focused on the saccade target's position. The second case would predict apparent position shifts toward the target also in directions orthogonal to the saccade. We report that such orthogonal mislocalization indeed occurs. Surprisingly, however, the ortho...
Visual objects briefly presented around the time of saccadic eye movements are perceived compressed ...
AbstractReaching towards a visual object in the absence of visual referents relies on a chain of inf...
AbstractWhile reading this text, your eyes jump from word to word. Yet you are unaware of the motion...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements transiently distort perceptual space. Visual objects flashed shortly ...
Localization of a brief visual target is inaccurate when presented around saccade onset. Perisaccadi...
AbstractFlashes presented around the time of a saccade are often mislocalized. The precise pattern o...
AbstractHumans and monkeys mislocalize targets flashed around the time of a saccade. Here, we presen...
Perisaccadic compression of the perceived location of flashed visual stimuli toward a saccade target...
Every saccadic eye movement that we make changes the image of the world on our retina. Yet, despite ...
Adaptive shortening of a saccade influences the metrics of other saccades within a spatial window ar...
Such perisaccadic mislocalization is maximal in the direction of the saccade and varies systematical...
The perceptual localization of objects flashed at the time of a saccade often shows large spatial di...
Contains fulltext : 70306.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Localization of ...
AbstractAt the time of an impending saccade receptive fields (RFs) undergo dynamic changes, that is,...
Contains fulltext : 71484.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Such perisacca...
Visual objects briefly presented around the time of saccadic eye movements are perceived compressed ...
AbstractReaching towards a visual object in the absence of visual referents relies on a chain of inf...
AbstractWhile reading this text, your eyes jump from word to word. Yet you are unaware of the motion...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements transiently distort perceptual space. Visual objects flashed shortly ...
Localization of a brief visual target is inaccurate when presented around saccade onset. Perisaccadi...
AbstractFlashes presented around the time of a saccade are often mislocalized. The precise pattern o...
AbstractHumans and monkeys mislocalize targets flashed around the time of a saccade. Here, we presen...
Perisaccadic compression of the perceived location of flashed visual stimuli toward a saccade target...
Every saccadic eye movement that we make changes the image of the world on our retina. Yet, despite ...
Adaptive shortening of a saccade influences the metrics of other saccades within a spatial window ar...
Such perisaccadic mislocalization is maximal in the direction of the saccade and varies systematical...
The perceptual localization of objects flashed at the time of a saccade often shows large spatial di...
Contains fulltext : 70306.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Localization of ...
AbstractAt the time of an impending saccade receptive fields (RFs) undergo dynamic changes, that is,...
Contains fulltext : 71484.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Such perisacca...
Visual objects briefly presented around the time of saccadic eye movements are perceived compressed ...
AbstractReaching towards a visual object in the absence of visual referents relies on a chain of inf...
AbstractWhile reading this text, your eyes jump from word to word. Yet you are unaware of the motion...