A self-avoiding walk with neural delays as a model of fixational eye movements
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] B. Bridgeman. A review of the role of efference copy in sensory and oculomotor control systems , 1995, Annals of Biomedical Engineering.
[2] Ehud Ahissar,et al. Figuring Space by Time , 2001, Neuron.
[3] T. Franosch,et al. Anomalous transport in the crowded world of biological cells , 2013, Reports on progress in physics. Physical Society.
[4] Martina Poletti,et al. Miniature eye movements enhance fine spatial detail , 2007, Nature.
[5] Toru Ohira. OSCILLATORY CORRELATION OF DELAYED RANDOM WALKS , 1997 .
[6] D. Hubel,et al. The role of fixational eye movements in visual perception , 2004, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[7] Chih-Yang Chen,et al. Sharper, Stronger, Faster Upper Visual Field Representation in Primate Superior Colliculus , 2016, Current Biology.
[8] H. L. Dryden,et al. Investigations on the Theory of the Brownian Movement , 1957 .
[9] M. Rolfs. Microsaccades: Small steps on a long way , 2009, Vision Research.
[10] Francisco M. Costela,et al. V1 neurons respond differently to object motion versus motion from eye movements , 2015, Nature Communications.
[11] D Purves,et al. The extraordinarily rapid disappearance of entoptic images. , 1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[12] Ralf Engbert,et al. Toward a model of microsaccade generation: the case of microsaccadic inhibition. , 2008, Journal of vision.
[13] Daniel Campos,et al. Persistence in eye movement during visual search , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[14] Ziad M. Hafed,et al. Similarity of superior colliculus involvement in microsaccade and saccade generation. , 2012, Journal of neurophysiology.
[15] A. Leventhal,et al. Signal timing across the macaque visual system. , 1998, Journal of neurophysiology.
[16] Michael B. McCamy,et al. Different fixational eye movements mediate the prevention and the reversal of visual fading , 2014, The Journal of physiology.
[17] L Glass,et al. Complex dynamics and bifurcations in neurology. , 1989, Journal of theoretical biology.
[18] J. Johnstone,et al. The efference copy neurone. , 1971, The Journal of experimental biology.
[19] Reinhold Kliegl,et al. Binocular coordination in microsaccades , 2003 .
[20] J. Nachmias. Determiners of the drift of the eye during monocular fixation. , 1961, Journal of the Optical Society of America.
[21] Pierre Kornprobst,et al. Microsaccades enable efficient synchrony-based coding in the retina: a simulation study , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[22] Adonis K Moschovakis,et al. The superior colliculus and eye movement control , 1996, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.
[23] Ehud Ahissar,et al. On the possible roles of microsaccades and drifts in visual perception , 2016, Vision Research.
[24] B. Mandelbrot,et al. Fractional Brownian Motions, Fractional Noises and Applications , 1968 .
[25] R. Steinman,et al. Small saccades serve no useful purpose: Reply to a letter by R. W. Ditchburn , 1980, Vision Research.
[26] Milton,et al. Delayed random walks. , 1995, Physical review. E, Statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics.
[27] K. Fujii,et al. Visualization for the analysis of fluid motion , 2005, J. Vis..
[28] Michael B. McCamy,et al. The effects of fixation target size and luminance on microsaccades and square-wave jerks , 2013, PeerJ.
[29] Longtin,et al. Noise and critical behavior of the pupil light reflex at oscillation onset. , 1990, Physical review. A, Atomic, molecular, and optical physics.
[30] Ralf Engbert,et al. Microsaccades Keep the Eyes' Balance During Fixation , 2004, Psychological science.
[31] R. Steinman,et al. Voluntary Control of Microsaccades during Maintained Monocular Fixation , 1967, Science.
[32] A. L. Yarbus,et al. Eye Movements and Vision , 1967, Springer US.
[33] A Longtin,et al. Modelling autonomous oscillations in the human pupil light reflex using non-linear delay-differential equations. , 1989, Bulletin of Mathematical Biology.
[34] Ohira,et al. Delayed stochastic systems , 2000, Physical review. E, Statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics.
[35] D L Sparks,et al. Translation of sensory signals into commands for control of saccadic eye movements: role of primate superior colliculus. , 1986, Physiological reviews.
[36] Xoana G. Troncoso,et al. Microsaccades: a neurophysiological analysis , 2009, Trends in Neurosciences.
[37] L. Glass,et al. Oscillation and chaos in physiological control systems. , 1977, Science.
[38] Ralf Engbert,et al. An integrated model of fixational eye movements and microsaccades , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[39] P. E. Hallett,et al. Power spectra for ocular drift and tremor , 1985, Vision Research.
[40] D. Sparks. The brainstem control of saccadic eye movements , 2002, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[41] J. Collins,et al. Open-loop and closed-loop control of posture: A random-walk analysis of center-of-pressure trajectories , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[42] J. Klafter,et al. The random walk's guide to anomalous diffusion: a fractional dynamics approach , 2000 .
[43] Heinrich H. Bülthoff,et al. Learned Non-Rigid Object Motion is a View-Invariant Cue to Recognizing Novel Objects , 2012, Front. Comput. Neurosci..
[44] J NACHMIAS,et al. Two-dimensional motion of the retinal image during monocular fixation. , 1959, Journal of the Optical Society of America.
[45] R. Steinman,et al. Miniature saccades: Eye movements that do not count , 1979, Vision Research.
[46] Francisco M. Costela,et al. Characteristics of Spontaneous Square-Wave Jerks in the Healthy Macaque Monkey during Visual Fixation , 2015, PloS one.
[47] M. Rucci,et al. Microsaccades Precisely Relocate Gaze in a High Visual Acuity Task , 2010, Nature Neuroscience.
[48] Ehud Ahissar,et al. Seeing via Miniature Eye Movements: A Dynamic Hypothesis for Vision , 2012, Front. Comput. Neurosci..
[49] R. W. DITCHBURN,et al. Vision with a Stabilized Retinal Image , 1952, Nature.
[50] A. L. I︠A︡rbus. Eye Movements and Vision , 1967 .
[51] B. Bridgeman,et al. The role of microsaccades in high acuity observational tasks , 1980, Vision Research.
[52] Susana Martinez-Conde,et al. Saccades during Attempted Fixation in Parkinsonian Disorders and Recessive Ataxia: From Microsaccades to Square-Wave Jerks , 2013, PloS one.
[53] Barbara J. Winterson,et al. Microsaccades during finely guided visuomotor tasks , 1976, Vision Research.
[54] A. A. Skavenski,et al. Contr of eye position in the dark. , 1970, Vision research.
[55] J. Victor,et al. Temporal Encoding of Spatial Information during Active Visual Fixation , 2012, Current Biology.
[56] Ralf Engbert,et al. Microsaccades are triggered by low retinal image slip. , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[57] Ralf Engbert,et al. Modeling the control of fixational eye movements with neurophysiological delays. , 2007, Physical review letters.
[58] John G. Milton,et al. Mathematics as a Laboratory Tool , 2014 .
[59] H. Namazi,et al. The analysis of the influence of fractal structure of stimuli on fractal dynamics in fixational eye movements and EEG signal , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[60] Markus Bongard,et al. Retinal ganglion cell synchronization by fixational eye movements improves feature estimation , 2002, Nature Neuroscience.
[61] H J Gerrits,et al. Artificial movements of a stabilized image. , 1970, Vision research.
[62] A. K. Moschovakis,et al. Neuronal mechanisms of two-dimensional orienting movements in the cat. I. A quantitative study of saccades and slow drifts produced in response to the electrical stimulation of the superior colliculus , 1996, Brain Research Bulletin.
[63] R. W. Ditchburn,et al. Involuntary eye movements during fixation , 1953, The Journal of physiology.
[64] Sharon M. Crook,et al. Fixational Eye Movement Correction of Blink-Induced Gaze Position Errors , 2014, PloS one.
[65] J. Kurths,et al. Persistence and phase synchronisation properties of fixational eye movements , 2008, The European Physical Journal Special Topics.
[66] A. Fuchs,et al. Evidence that the superior colliculus participates in the feedback control of saccadic eye movements. , 2002, Journal of neurophysiology.
[67] D. Fender,et al. The interplay of drifts and flicks in binocular fixation. , 1969, Vision research.
[68] Ziad M. Hafed,et al. A Neural Mechanism for Microsaccade Generation in the Primate Superior Colliculus , 2009, Science.
[69] C. Essex,et al. Delayed stochastic differential model for quiet standing. , 2001, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[70] R. Metzler,et al. Manipulation and Motion of Organelles and Single Molecules in Living Cells. , 2017, Chemical reviews.
[71] R. Steinman,et al. The role of small saccades in counting , 1977, Vision Research.
[72] Xoana G. Troncoso,et al. Microsaccades Counteract Visual Fading during Fixation , 2005, Neuron.
[73] S. Martinez-Conde,et al. The impact of microsaccades on vision: towards a unified theory of saccadic function , 2013, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[74] Xoana G. Troncoso,et al. Distinctive Features of Saccadic Intrusions and Microsaccades in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy , 2011, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[75] Michael Breakspear,et al. Fixational eye movements during viewing of dynamic natural scenes , 2013, Frontiers in Psychology.
[76] Andrey G. Cherstvy,et al. Anomalous diffusion models and their properties: non-stationarity, non-ergodicity, and ageing at the centenary of single particle tracking. , 2014, Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP.
[77] T. Cornsweet. Determination of the stimuli for involuntary drifts and saccadic eye movements. , 1956, Journal of the Optical Society of America.