Abstract

We tested the ability of normal subjects to make changes in the conjugacy of their saccades. Subjects dichoptically viewed a grid the size of which was 10% larger in one eye. The grids were centred onto a flat screen at 57 cm or 1 m from the subject. Horizontal saccades immediately became larger in the eye viewing the larger grid. For some subjects this disconjugacy persisted even under subsequent monocular viewing. Such persistent changes occurred mainly in the field where the required disconjugacy was divergent for centrifugal saccades, convergent for centripetal saccades. Vertical saccades also developed compensatory disconjugacy; its amplitude was smaller but less variable. To explain these results we propose a fast associative learning mechanism that pairs peripheral disparity with saccades and is capable of producing saccade disconjugacy even in the absence of disparity. For horizontal saccades a secondary conditioning of monocular depth cues by the disparity would also be involved.

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