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Authors

Zhiguo WangDalhousie University & Chinese Academy of Sciences
Jason SatelDalhousie University
Thomas P. TrappenbergDalhousie University
Raymond M. KleinDalhousie University

Abstract

When viewing a scene or searching for a target, an observer usually makes a series of saccades that quickly shift the orientation of the eyes. The present study explored how one saccade affects subsequent saccades within a dynamic neural field model of the superior colliculus (SC). The SC contains an oculocentric motor map that encodes the vector of saccades and remaps to the new fixation location after each saccade. Our simulations demonstrated that the observation that saccades which reverse their vectors are slower to initiate than those which repeat vectors can be explained by the afore-mentioned remapping process and the internal dynamics of the SC. How this finding connects to the study of inhibition of return is discussed and suggestions for future studies are presented.

About this article

History

Received: December 1, 2010;  Revised: May 6, 2011
Published: May 24, 2011

Citation

Wang, Z., Satel, J., Trappenberg, T. P., & Klein, R. M. (2011). Aftereffects of Saccades Explored in a Dynamic Neural Field Model of the Superior Colliculus. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 4(2):1, 1-16

Keywords

Saccade

dynamic neural field model

 inhibition of return

superior colliculus