Eye movements: The past 25 years
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TL;DR: This article reviews the past 25 years of research on eye movements, focusing on three oculomotor behaviors: gaze control, smooth pursuit and saccades, and on their interactions with vision.
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About: This article is published in Vision Research. The article was published on 01 Jul 2011. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Smooth pursuit & Visual search.
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Citations
Head-Eye Coordination at a Microscopic Scale
TL;DR: It is shown that ocular drift does not move the eyes randomly, but compensates for microscopic head movements, thereby yielding highly correlated movements in the two eyes, and challenge established views of how humans acquire visual information.
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Video-Based Eye Tracking in Sex Research: A Systematic Literature Review.
TL;DR: There is much potential for further studies to employ the current use of video-based eye-tracking technology because it is noninvasive and yet still allows for the assessment of both conscious and unconscious perceptional processes.
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Davida Teller Award Lecture 2013: The importance of prediction and anticipation in the control of smooth pursuit eye movements
TL;DR: New results are presented showing that the anticipatory smooth eye movements evoked by different cues differ substantially, even when the cues are equivalent in the information conveyed about the direction of future target motion.
43
How much is too much on monitoring tasks? Visual scan patterns of single air traffic controller performing multiple remote tower operations
TL;DR: The results demonstrated that ATCOs' visual scan patterns showed significant task related variation while performing different tasks and interacting with various interfaces on the controller's working position (CWP), and one ATCO could monitor and provide services for two airports simultaneously.
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Dynamic visuomotor synchronization: quantification of predictive timing.
Jun Maruta,Kristin J. Heaton,Kristin J. Heaton,Elisabeth M. Kryskow,Alexis L. Maule,Alexis L. Maule,Jamshid Ghajar,Jamshid Ghajar +7 more
TL;DR: The utility of a circular visual-tracking paradigm for assessment of predictive timing, using normal human subjects, is examined and several indices, whose distributions across subjects were such that instances of extremely poor performance were identifiable outside the margin of error determined by test–retest measures.
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