Abstract
Retinal motion of the visual scene is not consciously perceived during ocular saccades in normal everyday conditions. It has been suggested that extra-retinal signals actively suppress intra-saccadic motion perception to preserve stable perception of the visual world. However, using stimuli optimized to preferentially activate the M-pathway, Castet and Masson (2000) demonstrated that motion can be perceived during a saccade. Based on this psychophysical paradigm, we used electroencephalography and eye-tracking recordings to investigate the neural correlates related to the conscious perception of intra-saccadic motion. We demonstrated the effective involvement during saccades of the cortical areas V1-V2 and MT-V5, which convey motion information along the M-pathway. We also showed that individual motion perception was related to retinal temporal frequency.
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Nicolas, G., Castet, E., Rabier, A., Kristensen, E., Dojat, M., & Guérin-Dugué, A. (2021). Neural correlates of intra-saccadic motion perception. Journal of Vision, 21(11), 1–24. https://doi.org/10.1167/jov.21.11.19
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