Abstract

Short-latency ocular following responses in monkeys, induced by first- and second-order motion during a fixation task, were sensitive to stimulus size, retinal eccentricity and motion duration. Latency of eye movements was no different for first- or second-order motion and simply marked the occurrence of movement in the visual field. Second-order motion produced higher velocity eye movements than did first-order motion. The velocity of eye movements was influenced by the orientation of second-order pattern components as well as their conspicuous energy. Even when partially suppressed by a fixation task, involuntary eye movements during the initial pursuit remain sensitive to several properties of visual motion.

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