AbstractPre-saccadic fixation durations associated with saccades directed in different directions were compared in three endogenous-attention oriented saccadic scanning tasks (i.e. visual search and scene viewing). Pre-saccadic fixation durations were consistently briefer before the execution of upward saccades, than downward saccades. Saccades also had a higher probability of being directed upwards than downwards. Pre-saccadic fixation durations were symmetric and longer for horizontally-directed saccades. The vertical visual field asymmetry in pre-saccadic fixation durations reflects an influence of factors not directly related to currently fixated elements. The ability to predict pre-saccadic fixation durations is important for computati...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
We interact with complex scenes using eye movements to select targets of interest. Studies have show...
AbstractVisual search for a line-element target differing sufficiently in orientation from a backgro...
AbstractPre-saccadic fixation durations associated with saccades directed in different directions we...
Utilizing 23 datasets, we report a meta-analysis of an asymmetry in presaccadic fixation durations f...
Visual exploration of natural scenes imposes demands that differ between the upper and the lower vis...
AbstractThe first goal of this study was to systematically document asymmetries in vertical saccade ...
Much effort has been made to explain eye guidance during natural scene viewing. However, a substanti...
AbstractThe direction in which people tend to move their eyes when inspecting images can reveal the ...
AbstractFive human subjects were trained in a single target gap saccade task (fixation point offset ...
Real time simulation of visual search behavior can occur only if the control of fixation durations i...
This work was supported by the James S. McDonnell Foundation (Scholar Award to ARH).Peer reviewedPub...
No author version is available for upload (MF 8 Dec 2015)Neurologically normal individuals devote m...
AbstractVisual processing and subsequent action are limited by the effectiveness of eye movement con...
AbstractIf two targets are both on the visual axis of one eye or the other, and binocular fixation i...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
We interact with complex scenes using eye movements to select targets of interest. Studies have show...
AbstractVisual search for a line-element target differing sufficiently in orientation from a backgro...
AbstractPre-saccadic fixation durations associated with saccades directed in different directions we...
Utilizing 23 datasets, we report a meta-analysis of an asymmetry in presaccadic fixation durations f...
Visual exploration of natural scenes imposes demands that differ between the upper and the lower vis...
AbstractThe first goal of this study was to systematically document asymmetries in vertical saccade ...
Much effort has been made to explain eye guidance during natural scene viewing. However, a substanti...
AbstractThe direction in which people tend to move their eyes when inspecting images can reveal the ...
AbstractFive human subjects were trained in a single target gap saccade task (fixation point offset ...
Real time simulation of visual search behavior can occur only if the control of fixation durations i...
This work was supported by the James S. McDonnell Foundation (Scholar Award to ARH).Peer reviewedPub...
No author version is available for upload (MF 8 Dec 2015)Neurologically normal individuals devote m...
AbstractVisual processing and subsequent action are limited by the effectiveness of eye movement con...
AbstractIf two targets are both on the visual axis of one eye or the other, and binocular fixation i...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
We interact with complex scenes using eye movements to select targets of interest. Studies have show...
AbstractVisual search for a line-element target differing sufficiently in orientation from a backgro...