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Microsaccades and blinks trigger illusory rotation in the "rotating snakes" illusion.
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Microsaccades and blinks trigger illusory rotation in the "rotating snakes" illusion.
Authors text
Otero-Millan, Jorge, Macknik, Stephen L, Martinez-Conde, Susana
Journal/Book
J Neuroscience
Year
2012
Abstract
Certain repetitive arrangements of luminance gradients elicit the perception of strong illusory motion. Among them, the “Rotating Snakes Illusion” has generated a large amount of interest in the visual neurosciences, as well as in the public. Prior evidence indicates that the Rotating Snakes illusion depends critically on eye movements, yet the specific eye movement types involved and their associated neural mechanisms remain controversial. According to recent reports, slow ocular drift—a nonsaccadic type of fixational eye movement—drives the illusion, whereas microsaccades produced during attempted fixation fail to do so. Here, we asked human subjects to indicate the presence or absence of rotation during the observation of the illusion while we simultaneously recorded their eye movements with high precision. We found a strong quantitative link between microsaccade and blink production and illusory rotation. These results suggest that transient oculomotor events such as microsaccades, saccades, and blinks, rather than continuous drift, act to trigger the illusory motion in the Rotating Snakes illusion.
Citation
J Neurosci. 2012 Apr 25;32(17):6043-51.
Broad Topic
Ocular motor control
Vision while moving
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