Abstract
Human saccadic eye movements have three types of overshoot: dynamic overshoot, lasting 10–30 ms; glissadic overshoot, lasting 30–500 ms; and static overshoot, which is amended—after a delay of about 200 ms—by a subsequent corrective saccade. Glissades are the slow drifting eye movements occasionally seen at the end of saccadic eye movements. Glissades are hypothecated to be produced by mismatches in the pulse and step components of the motoneuronal controller signals. Glissades are not vergence eye movements, although the dynamics are similar.
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