Abstract

Visual sensitivity was measured during vergence eye movements in order to determine whether a suppression of vision similar to that associated with saccades is also present during vergence. Suppression was evaluated psychophysically by determining sensitivity to briefly presented, full-field decrements of light in a Ganzfeld. Subjects were rougly 0.5 log unit less sensitive when stimuli were presented at the beginning of a 2-3 deg convergent or divergent eye movement, than during steady fixation. Thus, the concept of saccadic suppression must be broadened to include visual suppression that also accompanies nonsaccadic eye movements. These results support the hypothesis that vision is affected by signals that accompany initiation of oculomotor activity.

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