Detection of intrasaccadic displacements and depth rotations of moving objects

In a display with a stationary and a moving object, subjects saccaded towards one of the objects and had to detect intrasaccadic changes in position or orientation of either the saccade target or the saccade flanker. Compared to performance for stationary objects, displacement detection for translat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vision research (Oxford) 2002-02, Vol.42 (3), p.379-391
Hauptverfasser: Gysen, Veerle, De Graef, Peter, Verfaillie, Karl
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creator Gysen, Veerle
De Graef, Peter
Verfaillie, Karl
description In a display with a stationary and a moving object, subjects saccaded towards one of the objects and had to detect intrasaccadic changes in position or orientation of either the saccade target or the saccade flanker. Compared to performance for stationary objects, displacement detection for translating objects was better and unaffected by saccadic status of the changed object. This pattern proved to be specific to position changes in translating objects and did not generalize to other types of motion (i.e., rotation) or to other types of intrasaccadic changes (i.e., orientation shifts). Superior transsaccadic coding of the position of a translating object was also observed in control experiments with only a single object present on each trial. Possible accounts in terms of selective attention to moving objects and perceptual relevance of object position are pitted against the data, suggesting qualitative differences in the transsaccadic representation of translating and stationary objects.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Depth Perception - physiology
Female
Fixation, Ocular - physiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Male
Motion
Motion Perception - physiology
Object perception
Perception
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Rotation
Saccade
Saccades - physiology
Vision
title Detection of intrasaccadic displacements and depth rotations of moving objects
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