Disconjugate memory-guided saccades to disparate targets: evidence for 3D sensitivity.

Exp Brain Res

Laboratoire de Physiologie de la Perception et de l'Action, UMR 9950, CNRS-Collège de France, Paris, France.

Published: October 1998

The saccadic system has been traditionally regarded as two-dimensional (horizontal, vertical) and basically conjugate in the two eyes. However, saccades to disparate targets (e.g., targets in real three-dimensional space that are located in different directions and at different distances) are naturally disconjugate. We report here that memory-guided saccades to a disparate target flashed 1 s earlier become disconjugate following repeated trials. After 15 min of repetition, the disconjugacy persists even when the target to be remembered is no longer disparate. This suggests fast memory-based learning. Learning, however, fails to occur if, during the repetition trials, the memory delay is 2 s. These findings suggest that the saccadic system has access to a 3D representation of targets and is gifted with 3D short-term memory and learning capacity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s002210050529DOI Listing

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