The rapid point-to-point movements of the eyes called saccades are the most commonly made movement by humans, yet differ from nearly every other type of motor output in that …
The human motor system and muscles are subject to fluctuations in the short and long term. Motor adaptation is classically thought of as a low-level process that compensates for the …
AC Schütz, D Souto - Frontiers in human neuroscience, 2015 - frontiersin.org
Adaptation of saccades can be induced by different error signals, such as retinal position errors, prediction errors, or reinforcement learning. Recently, we showed that a shift in the …
F Heins, M Lappe - Journal of Vision, 2022 - jov.arvojournals.org
Saccadic eye movements bring objects of interest onto our fovea. These gaze shifts are essential for visual perception of our environment and the interaction with the objects within …
A Meermeier, S Gremmler, K Richert… - Journal of …, 2017 - iovs.arvojournals.org
Saccadic adaptation is an oculomotor learning process that maintains the accuracy of eye movements to ensure effective perception of the environment. Although saccadic adaptation …
S Rahmouni, L Madelain - Vision research, 2019 - Elsevier
Despite changes in the physical structures controlling the eyes, saccades, the rapid eye movements used to explore the visual environment, remain accurate throughout the lifetime …
D Souto, AC Schütz - Psychology of learning and motivation, 2020 - Elsevier
When a saccadic eye movement does not land accurately on its visual target, subsequent saccades to the same target are subject to a corrective adjustment, which has been called …
I Wagner, AC Schütz - Journal of Neurophysiology, 2023 - journals.physiology.org
Motor adaptation maintains movement accuracy. To evaluate movement accuracy, motor adaptation relies on an error signal, generated by the movement target, while suppressing …
A Khan, SA McFadden, M Harwood… - Journal of …, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
When saccadic eye movements consistently fail to land on their intended target, saccade accuracy is maintained by gradually adapting the movement size of successive saccades …