Transient spatiotopic integration across saccadic eye movements mediates visual stability

Author:

Cicchini Guido M.1,Binda Paola23,Burr David C.45,Morrone M. Concetta26

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Neuroscience, National Research Council (CNR), Pisa, Italy;

2. Department of Translational Research on New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy;

3. Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington;

4. Department of Neuroscience, University of Florence, Florence, Italy;

5. Department of Psychology, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Perth, Australia; and

6. Scientific Institute Stella Maris (IRCSS), Pisa, Italy

Abstract

Eye movements pose major problems to the visual system, because each new saccade changes the mapping of external objects on the retina. It is known that stimuli briefly presented around the time of saccades are systematically mislocalized, whereas continuously visible objects are perceived as spatially stable even when they undergo large transsaccadic displacements. In this study we investigated the relationship between these two phenomena and measured how human subjects perceive the position of pairs of bars briefly displayed around the time of large horizontal saccades. We show that they interact strongly, with the perisaccadic bar being drawn toward the other, dramatically altering the pattern of perisaccadic mislocalization. The interaction field extends over a wide range (200 ms and 20°) and is oriented along the retinotopic trajectory of the saccade-induced motion, suggesting a mechanism that integrates pre- and postsaccadic stimuli at different retinal locations but similar external positions. We show how transient changes in spatial integration mechanisms, which are consistent with the present psychophysical results and with the properties of “remapping cells” reported in the literature, can create transient craniotopy by merging the distinct retinal images of the pre- and postsaccadic fixations to signal a single stable object.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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