Results 71 to 80 of about 2,608 (218)

On the Dissociation between Microsaccade Rate and Direction after Peripheral Cues: Microsaccadic Inhibition Revisited [PDF]

open access: yesThe Journal of Neuroscience, 2013
Microsaccades during fixation exhibit distinct time courses of frequency and direction modulations after stimulus onsets, but the mechanisms for these modulations are unresolved. On the one hand, microsaccade rate drops within <100 ms after stimulus onset, a phenomenon described as microsaccadic inhibition.
Ziad M, Hafed, Alla, Ignashchenkova
openaire   +2 more sources

The behavioural and neurophysiological modulation of microsaccades in monkeys [PDF]

open access: yes, 2009
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We show here that monkeys are a suitable model for studying the neurophysiology governing these modulations of microsaccades.
Bell, Andrew H.   +4 more
core   +2 more sources

Relationship between the Frequency of Microsaccade and Attentional State

open access: yesi-Perception, 2011
It has been shown that the attentional state affects the properties of microsaccade. In this study, we investigated the relationship between the time courses of attentional state and of microsaccade frequency.
Hirohiko Kaneko   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

V1-bypassing suppression leads to direction-specific microsaccade modulation in visual coding and perception

open access: yesNature Communications, 2022
How microsaccades modulate visual coding and perception remains incompletely understood. Here, the authors identify an emerging suppression specific to microsaccade directions that alters responses in macaque V2 and impacts perceptual decisions.
Yujie Wu   +8 more
doaj   +1 more source

Dissociable Cortical and Subcortical Mechanisms for Mediating the Influences of Visual Cues on Microsaccadic Eye Movements

open access: yesFrontiers in Neural Circuits, 2021
Visual selection in primates is intricately linked to eye movements, which are generated by a network of cortical and subcortical neural circuits. When visual selection is performed covertly, without foveating eye movements toward the selected targets, a
Ziad M. Hafed   +8 more
doaj   +1 more source

MICROSACCADES IN PARKINSON'S DISEASE

open access: green, 2014
Individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD) display deficits in voluntary saccade generation but improved automatic, visually-triggered saccade performance. This can be tested using prosaccades, saccades to visual stimuli, and antisaccades, saccades in the opposite direction from the visual stimuli.
Hailey McInnis
openalex   +3 more sources

The Relative Accuracy of Different Methods for Measuring Mind Wandering Subtypes: A Systematic Review

open access: yesBrain and Behavior, Volume 15, Issue 8, August 2025.
How do we accurately measure mind wandering? This review compares five methods: from self‐reports (prone to bias) to brain scans (precise but expensive). No single method captures all aspects, so we propose the MAMW framework—a unified approach combining strengths of each technique.
Sholeh Nazari   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Microsaccadic Efficacy and Contribution to Foveal and Peripheral Vision [PDF]

open access: yes, 2012
Our eyes move constantly, even when we try to fixate our gaze. Fixational eye movements prevent and restore visual loss during fixation, yet the relative impact of each type of fixational eye movement remains controversial.
Baer, M.   +9 more
core   +3 more sources

Dynamics of fixational eye position and microsaccades during spatial cueing: the case of express microsaccades [PDF]

open access: yesJournal of Neurophysiology, 2018
Microsaccades are systematically modulated by peripheral spatial cues, and these eye movements have been implicated in perceptual and motor performance changes in cueing tasks. However, an additional oculomotor factor that may also influence performance in these tasks, fixational eye position itself, has been largely neglected so far.
Xiaoguang Tian   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Reporting Eye‐Tracking Research in Second Language Acquisition and Bilingualism: A Synthesis and Field‐Specific Guidelines

open access: yesLanguage Learning, Volume 75, Issue 1, Page 250-294, March 2025.
Abstract Eye tracking has taken hold in second language acquisition (SLA) and bilingualism as a valuable technique for researching cognitive processes, yet a comprehensive picture of reporting practices is still lacking. Our systematic review addressed this gap.
Aline Godfroid (she/her)   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

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