Spatial Scale and Saccade Programming
- 1 September 1997
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perception
- Vol. 26 (9) , 1159-1167
- https://doi.org/10.1068/p261159
Abstract
The global effect in eye orienting occurs when saccades land at the ‘centre of gravity’ of a target stimulus configuration. Short-latency saccades are particularly prone to this effect whereas longer-latency saccades may show more influence of fine detail. Alternative explanations of these effects are considered and data are presented from an experiment in which the influence of different stimulus features on the global effect in a search task was examined. The effect shows a substantially different time course for target-distractor combinations differing in contrast polarity (black vs white) than for combinations differing in shape (circle vs square). It is concluded that the global effect cannot be explained either as a high-level strategic effect or as an effect of automatic fast processing of low-spatial-frequency information in early sensory channels. Instead it is suggested that the visual-spatial-integration characteristic of the global effect is an integral and unavoidable part of the process of selection of saccadic response.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortexNature, 1993
- Programming of Stimulus-Elicited Saccadic Eye MovementsPublished by Springer Nature ,1992
- Reducing the influence of non-target stimuli on saccade accuracy: Predictability and latency effectsVision Research, 1986
- Global visual processing for saccadic eye movementsVision Research, 1982
- An analysis of the saccadic system by means of double step stimuliVision Research, 1979
- Accurate three-dimensional eyetrackerApplied Optics, 1978
- Simple reaction time as a measure of the temporal response properties of transient and sustained channelsVision Research, 1975
- Effect of Non-Target Stimuli upon Length of Voluntary SaccadesPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1972
- On the existence of neurones in the human visual system selectively sensitive to the orientation and size of retinal imagesThe Journal of Physiology, 1969
- Application of fourier analysis to the visibility of gratingsThe Journal of Physiology, 1968