Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6203714 Vision Research 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Correctly perceiving the direction of a visible object with respect to one's self (egocentric visual direction) requires that information about the location of the image on the retina (oculocentric visual direction) be combined with signals about the position of the eyes in the head. The Wells-Hering laws that govern the perception of visual direction and modern restatements of these laws assume implicitly that retinal and eye-position information are independent of one another. By measuring observers' manual pointing responses to targets in different horizontal locations, we show that retinal and eye-position information are not treated independently in the brain. In particular, decreasing the relative visibility of one eye's retinal image reduces the strength of the eye-position signal associated with that eye. The results can be accounted for by interactions between eye-specific retinal and eye-position signals at a common neural location.

► Eye-position and retinal information determine perceived egocentric direction. ► It is assumed that eye-position and retinal information are processed independently. ► Here we show that these two sources of information interact with one another. ► Monocular eye-position signals are likely to occur at higher cortical visual areas.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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