THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION

Even during fixation, the eye is rarely still, as miniature eye movements continue to occur within fixational periods of the eye. These miniature movements are referred to as fixational eye movements. Microsaccades are one of the three types of fixational eye movements that have been identified. Mic...

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Other Authors: Romulus, Darwin (author)
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Florida Atlantic University
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Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013799
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spelling ndltd-fau.edu-oai-fau.digital.flvc.org-fau_821392021-10-16T05:04:22Z THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION FA00013799 Romulus, Darwin (author) Hong, Sang Wook (Thesis advisor) Florida Atlantic University (Degree grantor) Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences Charles E. Schmidt College of Science 105 p. application/pdf Electronic Thesis or Dissertation Text English Even during fixation, the eye is rarely still, as miniature eye movements continue to occur within fixational periods of the eye. These miniature movements are referred to as fixational eye movements. Microsaccades are one of the three types of fixational eye movements that have been identified. Microsaccades have been attributed to different visual processes/phenomena such as fixation stability, perceptual fading, and multistable perception. Still, debates surrounding the functional role of microsaccades in vision ensued, as many of the findings from earlier microsaccade reports contradict one another and the polarity in the field caused by these debates led many to believe that microsaccades do not hold a necessary/specialized role in vision. To gain a deeper understanding of microsaccades and its relevance in vision, we sought out to assess the role of microsaccades in bistable motion perception in our behavioral/eye-tracking study. Observers participated in an eye-tracking experiment where they were asked to complete a motion discrimination task while viewing a bistable apparent motion stimuli. The collected eye-tracking data was then used to train a classification model to predict directions of illusory motion perceived by observers. We found that small changes in gaze position during fixation, occurring within or outside microsaccadic events, predicted the direction of motion pattern imposed by the motion stimuli. Our findings suggest that microsaccades and fixational eye movements are correlated with motion perception and that miniature eye movements occurring during fixation may have relevance in vision. Florida Atlantic University Eye--Movements Saccadic eye movements Eye tracking Includes bibliography. Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2021. FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection Copyright © is held by the author with permission granted to Florida Atlantic University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder. http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013799 https://fau.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/fau%3A82139/datastream/TN/view/THE%20ASSESMENT%20OF%20THE%20ROLE%20OF%20MICROSACCADIC%20EYE%20MOVEMENTS%20IN%20BISTABLE%20MOTION%20PERCEPTION.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Eye--Movements
Saccadic eye movements
Eye tracking
spellingShingle Eye--Movements
Saccadic eye movements
Eye tracking
THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION
description Even during fixation, the eye is rarely still, as miniature eye movements continue to occur within fixational periods of the eye. These miniature movements are referred to as fixational eye movements. Microsaccades are one of the three types of fixational eye movements that have been identified. Microsaccades have been attributed to different visual processes/phenomena such as fixation stability, perceptual fading, and multistable perception. Still, debates surrounding the functional role of microsaccades in vision ensued, as many of the findings from earlier microsaccade reports contradict one another and the polarity in the field caused by these debates led many to believe that microsaccades do not hold a necessary/specialized role in vision. To gain a deeper understanding of microsaccades and its relevance in vision, we sought out to assess the role of microsaccades in bistable motion perception in our behavioral/eye-tracking study. Observers participated in an eye-tracking experiment where they were asked to complete a motion discrimination task while viewing a bistable apparent motion stimuli. The collected eye-tracking data was then used to train a classification model to predict directions of illusory motion perceived by observers. We found that small changes in gaze position during fixation, occurring within or outside microsaccadic events, predicted the direction of motion pattern imposed by the motion stimuli. Our findings suggest that microsaccades and fixational eye movements are correlated with motion perception and that miniature eye movements occurring during fixation may have relevance in vision. === Includes bibliography. === Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2021. === FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
author2 Romulus, Darwin (author)
author_facet Romulus, Darwin (author)
title THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION
title_short THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION
title_full THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION
title_fullStr THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION
title_full_unstemmed THE ASSESMENT OF THE ROLE OF MICROSACCADIC EYE MOVEMENTS IN BISTABLE MOTION PERCEPTION
title_sort assesment of the role of microsaccadic eye movements in bistable motion perception
publisher Florida Atlantic University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013799
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