M Hallett - Clinical Neurophysiology, 2007 - Elsevier
This review deals with the physiology of the initiation of a voluntary movement and the appreciation of whether it is voluntary or not. I argue that free will is not a driving force for …
RJ Krauzlis - The Neuroscientist, 2005 - journals.sagepub.com
Primates use two types of voluntary eye movements to track objects of interest: pursuit and saccades. Traditionally, these two eye movements have been viewed as distinct systems …
P Thier, UJ Ilg - Current opinion in neurobiology, 2005 - Elsevier
Smooth-pursuit eye movements are used to stabilize the image of a moving object of interest on the fovea, thus guaranteeing its high-acuity scrutiny. Such movements are based on a …
C Amiez, M Petrides - Progress in neurobiology, 2009 - Elsevier
There are several eye fields in the primate frontal cortex. The number and location of these oculomotor control zones remain controversial, especially in the human brain. In the …
M Spering, AC Schütz, DI Braun… - Journal of …, 2011 - journals.physiology.org
Success of motor behavior often depends on the ability to predict the path of moving objects. Here we asked whether tracking a visual object with smooth pursuit eye movements helps to …
E Kowler, JF Rubinstein, EM Santos… - Annual review of vision …, 2019 - annualreviews.org
Smooth pursuit eye movements maintain the line of sight on smoothly moving targets. Although often studied as a response to sensory motion, pursuit anticipates changes in …
C von Hofsten, H Uhlig, M Adell… - Research in Autism …, 2009 - Elsevier
Patterns of eye movements were studied in a group of 10 preschool children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and in two reference groups with typically developing (TD) …
M Suh, R Kolster, R Sarkar, B McCandliss, J Ghajar… - Neuroscience …, 2006 - Elsevier
Given that even mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) may produce extensive diffuse axonal injury (DAI), we hypothesized that mild TBI patients would show deficits in predictive smooth …