Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034417 Vision Research 2010 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Strategies of saccadic planning must take into account both the required level of accuracy of the saccades, and the time and resources needed to plan and execute the movements. To determine relationships between accuracy and time, we studied sequences of saccades made to scan a set of stationary targets located at the corners of an imaginary square. Target separation and size varied. The time taken to complete saccadic sequences increased with the required level of precision, in agreement with the classical Fitts’s Law (1954) relationship. This was mainly due to the use of error-correcting secondary saccades, whose frequency increased with target separation and decreased with target size. Increases in the time spent fixating near each target did not increase the accuracy of the next primary saccade in the sequence. Instead, secondary saccades were the principal means of correcting landing errors of primary saccades. The results are consistent with a scanning strategy that discourages careful planning of individual saccades in favor of increasing the rate of saccadic production (i.e., exploration), using secondary saccades as needed to correct saccadic landing errors.

Research highlights► Fitts’s Law applies to sequences of saccades. ► This application was due to the frequency of secondary saccades. ► The time preceding the primary saccade did not correlate with the accuracy. ► Secondary saccades were the preferred option for improving landing accuracy even when ample time was available.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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