AbstractWhen monkeys interrupt their saccadic scanning of a visual scene to look at a suddenly appearing target, saccades to the target are made after an “express” latency or after a longer “regular” latency. The purpose of this study was to analyze the spatial patterns of scanning, express, and regular saccades. Scanning patterns were spatially biased. Express saccade patterns were biased, too, and were directly correlated with scanning patterns. Regular saccade patterns were more uniform and were not directly correlated with scanning patterns. Express saccades, but not regular saccades, seemed to be facilitated by preparation to scan. This study contributes to a general understanding of how monkeys examine scenes containing both unchangin...
AbstractNatural scenes are explored by combinations of saccadic eye movements and shifts of attentio...
AbstractIn surveying their visual environment, primates, including humans make frequent rapid eye mo...
International audienceWhen an object moves in the visual field, its motion evokes a streak of activi...
AbstractWhen monkeys interrupt their saccadic scanning of a visual scene to look at a suddenly appea...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
Abstract The latencies of saccades to suddenly appearing eccentric targets can have a bimodal distri...
When monkeys are presented simultaneously with multiple stimuli, they can make one of two types of r...
AbstractHumans and monkeys mislocalize targets flashed around the time of a saccade. Here, we presen...
To assess whether express saccades are generated under everyday conditions, we collected eye movemen...
To assess whether express saccades are generated under everyday conditions, we collected eye movemen...
AbstractWe investigated how saccade target selection by humans and macaque monkeys reacts to unexpec...
AbstractIn human subjects, two mechanisms for improving the efficiency of saccades in visual search ...
AbstractWe investigated how saccade target selection by humans and macaque monkeys reacts to unexpec...
AbstractIn animals with specialized foveae, eye position has a direct influence over the acquisition...
To gain insight into how vision guides eye movements, monkeys were trained to make a single saccade ...
AbstractNatural scenes are explored by combinations of saccadic eye movements and shifts of attentio...
AbstractIn surveying their visual environment, primates, including humans make frequent rapid eye mo...
International audienceWhen an object moves in the visual field, its motion evokes a streak of activi...
AbstractWhen monkeys interrupt their saccadic scanning of a visual scene to look at a suddenly appea...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
Abstract The latencies of saccades to suddenly appearing eccentric targets can have a bimodal distri...
When monkeys are presented simultaneously with multiple stimuli, they can make one of two types of r...
AbstractHumans and monkeys mislocalize targets flashed around the time of a saccade. Here, we presen...
To assess whether express saccades are generated under everyday conditions, we collected eye movemen...
To assess whether express saccades are generated under everyday conditions, we collected eye movemen...
AbstractWe investigated how saccade target selection by humans and macaque monkeys reacts to unexpec...
AbstractIn human subjects, two mechanisms for improving the efficiency of saccades in visual search ...
AbstractWe investigated how saccade target selection by humans and macaque monkeys reacts to unexpec...
AbstractIn animals with specialized foveae, eye position has a direct influence over the acquisition...
To gain insight into how vision guides eye movements, monkeys were trained to make a single saccade ...
AbstractNatural scenes are explored by combinations of saccadic eye movements and shifts of attentio...
AbstractIn surveying their visual environment, primates, including humans make frequent rapid eye mo...
International audienceWhen an object moves in the visual field, its motion evokes a streak of activi...