Abstract

Pursuit of a point target in real or apparent motion upon a dark, diffusely lighted or structured background was recorded with a scleral coil technique. Smooth and saccadic components were separated and analyzed with computer techniques. Sigma-pursuit was superior to pursuit of beta- or real motion: smooth pursuit gain was higher, saccadic rate was lower and the detrimental effect of a structured background was smaller. Due to directional errors, smooth pursuit velocity often exceeded target velocity when this was smaller than about 10°/sec. However, the smooth component in the correct direction of the target motion had a gain ⩽ 1.0 and decreasing at higher target velocities for all pursuit modes, inclusive sigma-pursuit.

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