Goal-directed eye movements (saccades) bring peripheral objects of interest into high-acuity foveal vision. In preparation for the incoming foveal image, the perception of the saccade …
J Intoy, N Mostofi, M Rucci - Proceedings of the National …, 2021 - National Acad Sciences
Humans use rapid eye movements (saccades) to inspect stimuli with the foveola, the region of the retina where receptors are most densely packed. It is well established that visual …
M Rolfs, M Carrasco - Journal of Neuroscience, 2012 - Soc Neuroscience
Humans and other animals with foveate vision make saccadic eye movements to prioritize the visual analysis of behaviorally relevant information. Even before movement onset, visual …
N Shelchkova, M Poletti - Proceedings of the National …, 2020 - National Acad Sciences
It is known that attention shifts prior to a saccade to start processing the saccade target before it lands in the foveola, the high-resolution region of the retina. Yet, once the target is …
Visual processing varies dramatically across the visual field. These differences start in the retina and continue all the way to the visual cortex. Despite these differences in processing …
C Wolf, AC Schütz - Journal of vision, 2015 - arvojournals.org
Due to the inhomogenous visual representation across the visual field, humans use peripheral vision to select objects of interest and foveate them by saccadic eye movements …
When visual objects shift rapidly across the retina, they produce motion blur. Intra-saccadic visual signals, caused incessantly by our own saccades, are thought to be eliminated at …
A Herwig, K Weiß, WX Schneider - … of the New York Academy of …, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
Human vision is characterized by a consistent pattern of saccadic eye movements. With each saccade, internal object representations change their retinal position and spatial …
Researchers have shown that the promptness to initiate a saccade is modulated by countless factors pertaining to the visual context and the task. However, experiments on …