Suppression of sensitivity to surround displacement during vergence eye movements

Suppression was investigated psychophysically in three human observers by measuring their loss of sensitivity to brief (20 ms) simultaneous vertical displacement (up to 0.5 degrees) of horizontal lines during 4 degrees convergence eye movements. A two-alternative forced choice procedure was used in which the stimulus was presented either in the first or second portion of a trial. The amplitude of the displacement pulse, the time of the pulse relative to convergence onset, and the portion of a trial in which the stimulus was presented were randomized. The results showed that suppression began about 200 ms before, and continued until 350 ms after, convergence onset with maximum loss occurring at 25 to 125 ms after convergence onset. The maximum sensitivity loss was about 0.25 to 0.30 log units. Since peripheral factors were minimized by the use of a brief stimulus presentation and an eccentrically placed surround, the suppression found was primarily attributed to central neural mechanisms. Finally, the suppression of sensitivity to pulse displacement during the initial phase of the vergence movement is consistent with a recently developed dual-mode model of the vergence system, in which the initial transient portion of a step response is preprogrammed whereas the final sustained portion is maintained by continuous feedback control.

[1]  B. A. Brooks,et al.  Influence of stimulus parameters on visual sensitivity during saccadic eye movement , 1975, Vision Research.

[2]  P. Latour Visual threshold during eye movements , 1962 .

[3]  D. Sparks,et al.  Corollary discharge provides accurate eye position information to the oculomotor system. , 1983, Science.

[4]  George K. Hung,et al.  A Dual-Mode Dynamic Model of the Vergence Eye Movement System , 1986, IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering.

[5]  R. Dodge Visual perception during eye movement , 1900 .

[6]  Robert K. Moore,et al.  Eyeblinks and visual suppression. , 1980, Science.

[7]  F C VOLKMANN,et al.  Vision during voluntary saccadic eye movements. , 1962, Journal of the Optical Society of America.

[8]  Stark Lawrence,et al.  Saccadic suppression of image displacement , 1976, Vision Research.

[9]  G. Orban,et al.  Movement perception during voluntary saccadic eye movements. , 1973, Vision research.

[10]  E. Matin Saccadic suppression: a review and an analysis. , 1974, Psychological bulletin.

[11]  N. Yakimoff,et al.  Some characteristics of the visual masking by moving contours , 1976, Vision Research.

[12]  G K Hung,et al.  Quantitative assessment of disparity vergence components. , 1986, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.

[13]  K. Manning,et al.  Eye-movement-dependent loss in vision and its time course during vergence , 1986, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[14]  Otmar Bock,et al.  Visual localization after strabismus surgery is compatible with the “outflow” theory , 1986, Vision Research.

[15]  Karen A. Manning,et al.  Vergence eye movements and visual suppression , 1984, Vision Research.

[16]  Suppression of sensitivity to surround motion during vergence eye movements , 1989, Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Northeast Bioengineering Conference.

[17]  S. B. Stevenson,et al.  Dependence of visual suppression on the amplitudes of saccades and blinks , 1986, Vision Research.

[18]  G. W. Beeler,et al.  Visual threshold changes resulting from spontaneous saccadic eye movements. , 1967, Vision research.

[19]  D. Pearce,et al.  Changes in visual sensitivity associated with voluntary saccades , 1970 .

[20]  John Semmlow,et al.  Dynamic accommodative vergence components in binocular vision , 1976, Vision Research.

[21]  Leonard Matin,et al.  Metacontrast and Saccadic Suppression , 1972, Science.

[22]  M. Sanders Handbook of Sensory Physiology , 1975 .

[23]  B. L. Zuber,et al.  Saccadic suppression: elevation of visual threshold associated with saccadic eye movements. , 1966, Experimental neurology.

[24]  L Mitrani,et al.  Smearing of the retinal image during voluntary saccadic eye movements. , 1970, Vision research.

[25]  L Mitrani,et al.  Temporal and spatial characteristics of visual suppression during voluntary saccadic eye movement. , 1970, Vision research.

[26]  J D Holtzman,et al.  Retinal image smear as a source of information about magnitude of eye movement. , 1978, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[27]  P. A. Ward,et al.  Effect of pupil size on steady state accommodation , 1985, Vision Research.

[28]  F. Campbell,et al.  Saccadic omission: Why we do not see a grey-out during a saccadic eye movement , 1978, Vision Research.

[29]  Lorrin A. Riggs,et al.  Measurements of visual suppression during opening, closing and blinking of the eyes , 1982, Vision Research.