Journal article
Visual perception and saccadic eye movements
M Ibbotson, B Krekelberg
Current Opinion in Neurobiology | Published : 2011
Abstract
We use saccades several times per second to move the fovea between points of interest and build an understanding of our visual environment. Recent behavioral experiments show evidence for the integration of pre- and postsaccadic information (even subliminally), the modulation of visual sensitivity, and the rapid reallocation of attention. The recent physiological literature has identified a characteristic modulation of neural responsiveness. -. perisaccadic reduction followed by a postsaccadic increase. -. that is found in many visual areas, but whose source is as yet unknown. This modulation seems optimal for reducing sensitivity during and boosting sensitivity between saccades, but no stud..
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Grants
Awarded by National Eye Institute
Funding Acknowledgements
The authors thank Drs Shaun Cloherty, Nic Price, and Adam Morris for comments on the manuscript, the authors of the original research summarized in Figure 1 for providing us with their data, and gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Australian Research Council (MI: CE0561903), the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (MI: 525461), the US National Eye Institute (BK: R01 EY017605), and the Pew Charitable Trusts (BK).