Literature DB >> 30655348

Time course of spatiotopic updating across saccades.

Jasper H Fabius1, Alessio Fracasso2,3,4, Tanja C W Nijboer5,6, Stefan Van der Stigchel5.   

Abstract

Humans move their eyes several times per second, yet we perceive the outside world as continuous despite the sudden disruptions created by each eye movement. To date, the mechanism that the brain employs to achieve visual continuity across eye movements remains unclear. While it has been proposed that the oculomotor system quickly updates and informs the visual system about the upcoming eye movement, behavioral studies investigating the time course of this updating suggest the involvement of a slow mechanism, estimated to take more than 500 ms to operate effectively. This is a surprisingly slow estimate, because both the visual system and the oculomotor system process information faster. If spatiotopic updating is indeed this slow, it cannot contribute to perceptual continuity, because it is outside the temporal regime of typical oculomotor behavior. Here, we argue that the behavioral paradigms that have been used previously are suboptimal to measure the speed of spatiotopic updating. In this study, we used a fast gaze-contingent paradigm, using high phi as a continuous stimulus across eye movements. We observed fast spatiotopic updating within 150 ms after stimulus onset. The results suggest the involvement of a fast updating mechanism that predictively influences visual perception after an eye movement. The temporal characteristics of this mechanism are compatible with the rate at which saccadic eye movements are typically observed in natural viewing.

Entities:  

Keywords:  remapping; saccade; spatiotopic updating; visual continuity; visual perception

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30655348      PMCID: PMC6369820          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1812210116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  62 in total

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5.  Saturation of the tilt aftereffect.

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8.  Perisaccadic Receptive Field Expansion in the Lateral Intraparietal Area.

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9.  Spatiotopic updating facilitates perception immediately after saccades.

Authors:  Jasper H Fabius; Alessio Fracasso; Stefan Van der Stigchel
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-09-30       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  No Evidence for Automatic Remapping of Stimulus Features or Location Found with fMRI.

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6.  Intra-saccadic displacement sensitivity after a lesion to the posterior parietal cortex.

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8.  Low-Level Visual Information Is Maintained across Saccades, Allowing for a Postsaccadic Handoff between Visual Areas.

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9.  Grounding deep neural network predictions of human categorization behavior in understandable functional features: The case of face identity.

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  9 in total

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