Abstract
Eye movements were monitored and a target circle subtending an angle of 7o was made to move during and dependent on the eye movements. Thresholds of detection of the resulting abnormal image displacements were obtained. Thresholds were low when both the eyes and the target moved either horizontally or vertically. They were higher by a factor of two or more when the eye movements and the target motions were not in the same plane. In the latter conditions, two processes account for the detection of target motion. One is a compensation process where the extent of that component of the motion of the retinal image of the target which is parallel to the eye movement is compared with the extent of the eye movement. The other process detects an angle between the plane of the target image motion and the plane of the eye movement. Our results indicate that the higher thresholds occurred when detection of this angle was required.
Published Version (
Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have