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Authors

Stefan Van der StigchelHelmholtz Institute, Utrecht University
Tanja C.W. NijboerHelmholtz Institute, Utrecht University

Abstract

In certain situations, the endpoint of an eye movement is not positioned on the centre of a target element, but deviates in the direction of another element. This phenomenon has been termed 'the global effect' and has proven to constitute a valuable measure of various processes that control and influence our oculomotor behavior. The goal of the current review is to provide insight in the factors that determine where the eyes land. We will focus on the fundamental characteristics of the global effect and discuss the various domains in which the global effect has been applied. The global effect appears to be best explained in terms of a weighted average of activity in a saccade map.

About this article

History

Received: 4 September 2011, revised 12 November 2011
Published: 17 November 2011

Citation

Van der Stigchel, S. & Nijboer, T.C.W. (2011). The global effect: what determines where the eyes land? Journal of Eye Movement Research, 4(2):3, 1-13.

Keywords

eye movements

global effect

saccade averaging

reading

visual search

review