Projects per year
Abstract
Gaze behavior during visual tracking consists of a combination of pursuit and saccadic movements. When the tracked object is intermittently occluded, the role of smooth pursuit is reduced, with a corresponding increase in the role of saccades. However, studies of visual tracking during occlusion have focused only on the first few saccades, usually with occlusion periods of less than 1 second in duration. We investigated tracking on a circular trajectory with random occlusions and found that an occluded object can be tracked reliably for up to several seconds with mainly anticipatory saccades and very little smooth pursuit. Furthermore, we investigated the accumulation of uncertainty in prediction and found that prediction errors seem to accumulate faster when an absolute reference frame is not available during tracking. We suggest that the observed saccadic tracking reflects the use of a time-based internal estimate of object position that is anchored to the environment via fixations.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Vision |
Volume | 22 |
Issue number | 1 |
Number of pages | 16 |
ISSN | 1534-7362 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 19 Jan 2022 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Fields of Science
- 6162 Cognitive science
- PURSUIT EYE-MOVEMENTS
- SMOOTH-PURSUIT
- TRANSIENT DISAPPEARANCE
- OCULOMOTOR CONTROL
- OCULAR PURSUIT
- MOTION
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Sense of Space: how the human mind interacts with the spatial world - a combined experimental/computational approach
01/09/2020 → 31/08/2025
Project: Research project
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UPP-PERFORMANCE: Human Performance in Complex Dynamic Tasks - A Unified Predictive Processing Approach
Lappi, O., Pekkanen, J., Tuhkanen, S., Rinkkala, P. J., Frantsi, R. M., Palomäki, J. P. & Siltala, A. E.
01/09/2019 → 31/08/2023
Project: Research project