Saccades shift the retina with high-speed motion. In order to compensate for the sudden displacement, the visuomotor system needs to combine saccade-related information and visual metrics. Many neurons in oculomotor but also in visual areas shift their receptive field shortly before the execution of a saccade (Duhamel, Colby, & Goldberg, 1992; Nakamura & Colby, 2002). These shifts supposedly enable the binding of information from before and after the saccade. It is a matter of current debate whether these shifts are merely location based (i.e., involve remapping of abstract spatial coordinates) or also comprise information about visual features. We have recently presented fMRI evidence for a feature-based remapping mechanism in visual areas...
It may be hard to fathom, but our eyes make 3-5 fixations every second, connected by short, rapid ey...
Visual stability is thought to be mediated by predictive remapping of the relevant object informatio...
International audienceJonikaitis D, Szinte M, Rolfs M, Cavanagh P. Allocation of attention across sa...
Saccades shift the retina with high-speed motion. In order to compensate for the sudden displacement...
The ability to perceive the visual world around us as spatially stable despite frequent eye movement...
Saccadic eye movements cause rapid and dramatic displacements of the retinal image of the visual wor...
SummarySaccadic adaptation [1] is a powerful experimental paradigm to probe the mechanisms of eye mo...
Eye movements create an ever-changing image of the world on the retina. In particular, frequent sacc...
Plastic changes of saccades (i.e., following saccadic adaptation) do not transfer between oppositely...
To interact rapidly and effectively with our environment, our brain needs access to a neural represe...
To interact rapidly and effectively with our environment, our brain needs access to a neural represe...
SummaryAlthough conscious perception is smooth and continuous, the input to the visual system is a s...
Brain representations of visual space are predominantly eye-centred (retinotopic) yet our experience...
Contains fulltext : 199250.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Visual stabilit...
As the neural representation of visual information is initially coded in retinotopic coordinates, ey...
It may be hard to fathom, but our eyes make 3-5 fixations every second, connected by short, rapid ey...
Visual stability is thought to be mediated by predictive remapping of the relevant object informatio...
International audienceJonikaitis D, Szinte M, Rolfs M, Cavanagh P. Allocation of attention across sa...
Saccades shift the retina with high-speed motion. In order to compensate for the sudden displacement...
The ability to perceive the visual world around us as spatially stable despite frequent eye movement...
Saccadic eye movements cause rapid and dramatic displacements of the retinal image of the visual wor...
SummarySaccadic adaptation [1] is a powerful experimental paradigm to probe the mechanisms of eye mo...
Eye movements create an ever-changing image of the world on the retina. In particular, frequent sacc...
Plastic changes of saccades (i.e., following saccadic adaptation) do not transfer between oppositely...
To interact rapidly and effectively with our environment, our brain needs access to a neural represe...
To interact rapidly and effectively with our environment, our brain needs access to a neural represe...
SummaryAlthough conscious perception is smooth and continuous, the input to the visual system is a s...
Brain representations of visual space are predominantly eye-centred (retinotopic) yet our experience...
Contains fulltext : 199250.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Visual stabilit...
As the neural representation of visual information is initially coded in retinotopic coordinates, ey...
It may be hard to fathom, but our eyes make 3-5 fixations every second, connected by short, rapid ey...
Visual stability is thought to be mediated by predictive remapping of the relevant object informatio...
International audienceJonikaitis D, Szinte M, Rolfs M, Cavanagh P. Allocation of attention across sa...