Experimental test of visuomotor updating models that explain perisaccadic mislocalization.
Publication year
2008Source
Journal of Vision, 8, 14, (2008), pp. 8.1-22ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
Neurophysics
Former Organization
Medical Physics and Biophysics
Journal title
Journal of Vision
Volume
vol. 8
Issue
iss. 14
Page start
p. 8.1
Page end
p. 22
Subject
Biophysics; DCN 1: Perception and Action; UMCN 3.2: Cognitive neurosciencesAbstract
Localization of a brief visual target is inaccurate when presented around saccade onset. Perisaccadic mislocalization is maximal in the saccade direction and varies systematically with the target-saccade onset disparity. It has been hypothesized that this effect is either due to a sluggish representation of eye position, to low-pass filtering of the visual event, to saccade-induced compression of visual space, or to a combination of these effects. Despite their differences, these schemes all predict that the pattern of localization errors varies systematically with the saccade amplitude and kinematics. We tested these predictions for the double-step paradigm by analyzing the errors for saccades of widely varying amplitudes. Our data show that the measured error patterns are only mildly influenced by the primary-saccade amplitude over a large range of saccade properties. An alternative possibility, better accounting for the data, assumes that around saccade onset perceived target location undergoes a uniform shift in the saccade direction that varies with amplitude only for small saccades. The strength of this visual effect saturates at about 10 deg and also depends on target duration. Hence, we propose that perisaccadic mislocalization results from errors in visual-spatial perception rather than from sluggish oculomotor feedback.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [246216]
- Electronic publications [133894]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93266]
- Faculty of Science [37928]
- Open Access publications [107414]
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