Squeezing Uncertainty from Saccadic Compression [PDF]
Brief visual stimuli presented before and during a saccade are often mislocalized due to spatial compression. This saccadic compression effect is thought to have a perceptual basis, and results in visual objects being squeezed together and their number ...
Chapman, C. S. +2 more
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Peri-saccadic compression to two locations in a two-target choice saccade task [PDF]
When visual stimuli are presented at the onset of a saccadic eye movement they are seen compressed onto the target location of the saccade. This peri-saccadic compression is believed to result from internal feedback pathways between oculomotor and visual
Hamker, F.H. (Fred), Lappe, M. (Markus)
core +1 more source
Experimental test of visuomotor updating models that explain perisaccadic mislocalization
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 ...
Wetter, S.M.C.I. van, Opstal, A.J. van
openaire +5 more sources
Temporal uncertainty separates flashes from their background during saccades. [PDF]
It is known that spatial localization of flashed objects fails around the time of rapid eye movements (saccades). This mislocalization is often interpreted in terms of a combination of shifts and deformations of the brain’s representation of space to ...
Maij F, Brenner E, Smeets JB.
europepmc +5 more sources
Perisaccadic Compression Correlates with Saccadic Peak Velocity: Differential Association of Eye Movement Dynamics with Perceptual Mislocalization Patterns [PDF]
Objects flashed around the onset of a saccadic eye movement are grossly mislocalized. Perisaccadic mislocalization has been related to a spatiotemporal misalignment of an extraretinal eye position signal with the corresponding saccade. Two phenomena have been observed: a systematic shift of perceived positions in saccade direction and an additional ...
Florian, Ostendorf +3 more
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The use of the saccade target as a visual reference when localizing flashes during saccades [PDF]
Contains fulltext : 139147.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Flashes presented around the time of a saccade are often mislocalized. Such mislocalization is influenced by various factors.
Brenner, E. +4 more
core +4 more sources
The fate of object features during perisaccadic mislocalization
Visual objects flashed before a saccade appear compressed toward the saccade target. Simultaneously flashed objects merge perceptually into one. To better understand cortical interactions in perisaccadic processing, we study the perception of features of mislocalized objects. We report four new findings: First, when multiple objects of different colors
Lappe M, Kuhlmann S, Oerke B, Kaiser M
openaire +3 more sources
Spatial contexts can inhibit a mislocalization of visual stimuli during smooth pursuit [PDF]
The position of a flash presented during pursuit is mislocalized in the direction of the pursuit. Although this has been explained by a temporal mismatch between the slow visual processing of flash and fast efferent signals on eye positions, here we show
Hoshiyama, Minoru +3 more
core +1 more source
The reentry hypothesis: linking eye movements to visual perception [PDF]
Cortical organization of vision appears to be divided into perception and action. Models of vision have generally assumed that eye movements serve to select a scene for perception, so action and perception are sequential processes.
Hamker, Fred H.
core +1 more source
Pre-saccadic perception: separate time courses for enhancement and spatial pooling at the saccade target [PDF]
We interact with complex scenes using eye movements to select targets of interest. Studies have shown that the future target of a saccadic eye movement is processed differently by the visual system.
Buonocore, A., Fracasso, A., Melcher, D.
core +2 more sources

