Publication Date:
2019-06-28
Description:
Visual fixation can be maintained in spite of finger pressure on the monocularly viewing eye. The amount of extraocular muscle effort required to counter the eyepress is measured as the secondary deviation of the occluded fellow eye. Using this method, without drugs or neurological lesions, it is shown that corollary discharge (CD) governs perception of position of a luminous point in darkness, that is, an unstructured visual field. CD also controls visuomotor coordination measured with open-loop pointing and the matching of visual and auditory direction in light and in darkness. The incorrectly biased CD is superseded by visual position perception in normal structured environments, a phenomenon called visual capture of Matin. When the structured visual field is extinguished, leaving only a luminous point, gradual release from visual capture and return to the biased CD direction follows after a delay of about 5 sec.
Keywords:
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Type:
Perception and Psychophysics (ISSN 0031-5117); 34; 4 c
Format:
text
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