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Fixational eye movement
Microsaccades are a kind of fixational eye movement. They are small, jerk-like, involuntary eye movements, similar to miniature versions of voluntary
Microsaccade
Maintaining one's gaze on a single location
amplitude for microsaccades should be 12 arcminutes to distinguish microsaccades and saccades. However, further studies have shown that microsaccades can certainly
Fixation_(visual)
Eye movement
~200 ms; any longer than this is outside the express saccade range. Microsaccades are a related type of fixational eye movement that are small, jerk-like
Saccade
Inability to focus on distant objects
there is a causal relationship. Myopia is also correlated with increased microsaccade amplitude, suggesting that blurred vision from myopia might cause instability
Myopia
Sensory organ of vision
drift, ocular tremor, and microsaccades. Some irregular drifts, movements smaller than a saccade and larger than a microsaccade, subtend up to one tenth
Human_eye
Class of arthropods
in and out of focus, in a series of movements called photoreceptor microsaccades. This gives them, and possibly many other insects, a much clearer image
Insect
Medical condition of the brain
PMID 38743312. Alexander RG, Macknik SL, Martinez-Conde S (2018). "Microsaccade Characteristics in Neurological and Ophthalmic Disease". Frontiers in
Progressive supranuclear palsy
Progressive_supranuclear_palsy
Spaceflight with a crew or passengers
Alexander, Robert; Macknik, Stephen; Martinez-Conde, Susana (2020). "Microsaccades in applied environments: Real-world applications of fixational eye movement
Human_spaceflight
1872 painting by Claude Monet
properties can cause the Sun to fade from view and that changes in microsaccades underlie this effect. Most critics did not think Impression, Sunrise
Impression,_Sunrise
Ability to interpret the surrounding environment using light in the visible spectrum
there are different types of eye movements: fixational eye movements (microsaccades, ocular drift, and tremor), vergence movements, saccadic movements and
Visual_perception
called fixational eye movements, and they include ocular microtremor, microsaccades, and drift. Ocular tremor is the smallest of these movements, and it
Ocular_tremor
Process forming a path from many random steps
Pikovsky, A. (2011). "An integrated model of fixational eye movements and microsaccades". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (39): E765-70
Random_walk
Device intended to restore vision to blind people
a plate, a cup and cutlery. Two of the patients were found to make microsaccades similar to those of healthy control participants, and the properties
Visual_prosthesis
Illusion of image persistence
any image is moved over the retina by small eye movements known as microsaccades before much adaptation can occur. However, if the image is very intense
Afterimage
American Scientist (Born: 1974)
(2009). Covert orienting reflex: Involuntary pupil response predicts microsaccade production. Vision, 9(8), 399. Schneps, M.H., Rose, L.T., & Fischer,
Todd_Rose
Movement of the eyes
vertical deviation Eye tracking Gaze-contingency paradigm Listing's law Microsaccade Ocular tremor Orthoptist Oculesics Strabismus Progressive supranuclear
Eye_movement
Neural oscillation in the 25–140Hz range
Epilepsy, Sally Fletcher (2005) Gamma: Insight and Consciousness… Or just Microsaccades? – A summary of recent research. 2009-06-26. McDermott B, Porter E,
Gamma_wave
Type of eye movement used for closely following a moving object
children born very preterm. Eye movement Eye tracking Frontal eye fields Microsaccade Saccade Superior colliculus Endophenotype Grasse, K. L; Lisberger, S
Smooth_pursuit
Absence of the sensation of weight
Alexander, Robert G.; Macknik, Stephen L.; Martinez-Conde, Susana (2019). "Microsaccades in Applied Environments: Real-World Applications of Fixational Eye Movement
Weightlessness
Measuring the point of gaze or motion of an eye relative to the head
the eye following a moving object. Fixational eye movements include microsaccades: small, involuntary saccades that occur during attempted fixation. Most
Eye_tracking
Medical issues associated with spaceflight
Alexander, Robert; Macknik, Stephen; Martinez-Conde, Susana (2020). "Microsaccades in applied environments: Real-world applications of fixational eye movement
Effect of spaceflight on the human body
Effect_of_spaceflight_on_the_human_body
Visual disturbance
deficit In the fixation system, the ocular motor noise that comes from microsaccades, microtremors and slow drifts (all necessary for important perceptual
Oscillopsia
English medical doctor (1766–1848)
JSTOR 106628. (communicated by Erasmus Darwin) Rolfs, Martin (2009), "Microsaccades: Small steps on a long way", Vision Research, 49 (20): 2415–41, doi:10
Robert_Darwin
Type of perceptual task requiring attention
to peripheral stimuli, but later studies found that small saccades (microsaccades) occur during these tasks, and that these eye movements are frequently
Visual_search
Australian experimental psychologist
University, USA assisting in research into involuntary eye movements (microsaccades) with Lorrin Andrews Riggs. Day moved in 1965 to Monash University which
Ross_Day
Medical condition affecting movement coordination
dysmetria will constantly produce abnormal eye movements including microsaccades, ocular flutter, and square wave jerks even when the eye is at rest
Dysmetria
PMC 4385455. PMID 25698649. Poletti M, Listorti C, Rucci M (2013). "Microsaccades compensate for non-uniform foveal vision". Current Biology. 23 (17):
Michele_Rucci
task does not explicitly require eye movements: the direction of small microsaccades point towards the location of objects in VSTM. Attention Attention versus
Visual_short-term_memory
Spanish-American neuroscientist and writer (born 1969)
disease. She investigates how small, involuntary eye movements called microsaccades affect perception and visual processing. She also studies how neurological
Susana_Martinez-Conde
Swiss psychologist
PMC 7725399. PMID 33828684. Martinez-Conde, S; Engbert, R; Groner, R (2020). "Microsaccades: Empirical Research and Methodological Advances - Introduction to Part
Rudolf_Groner
Technique in visual and cognitive research
Troncoso, X. G.; Macknik, S. L.; Martinez-Conde, S. (2008-10-02). "Microsaccades counteract perceptual filling-in". Journal of Vision. 8 (14): 15.1–9
Binocular_Switch_Suppression
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Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Sanskrit, Telugu
The Arranger; Sage who Wrote Mahabharat
Girl/Female
Assamese, Bengali, Celebrity, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, Traditional
Line; Artwork; Beauty; The Heart of God; Limit
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Hitchens.
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Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit
Unchangeable
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Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Name of a Sage
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The River
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American, British, English
Cushion
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Christian & English(British/American/Australian)
Prosperous
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French
Feminine form of French Pascal, PASCALE means "Passover; Easter."
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