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Encyclopedia > Saccade

A saccade is a fast movement of an eye, head, or other part of an animal's body or of a device. It can also be a fast shift in frequency of an emitted signal, or other such fast change. Eye movements are the voluntary or involuntary movements of the eye. ...


Its purpose can be illustrated by the human eye. Humans do not look at a scene in a steady way. Instead, the eyes jerk around, locating interesting parts of the scene and building up an intelligent mental 'map' corresponding to the scene. In the human eye, one reason for saccades is that only the central part of the retina, the macula, has a high concentration of color sensitive nerve endings, called cone cells. The rest of the retina is mainly made up of monochrome nerve endings called rod cells, which are especially good for motion detection. Thus, the macula makes up the high-resolution central part the of human retina. This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ... Human eye cross-sectional view. ... Human eye cross-sectional view. ... Normalised absorption spectra of human cone (S,M,L) and rod (R) cells Cone cells, or cones, are cells in the retina which only function in relatively bright light. ... Normalised absoption spectra of human rod (R) and cone (S,M,L) cells. ...


By moving the eye so that small parts of a scene can be sensed with greater resolution, body resources can be used efficiently. If an entire scene were viewed in high resolution, the diameter of the optic nerve would need to be larger than the diameter of the eyeball itself. Subsequent processing of such a high-resolution image would require a brain many times larger than its current size. The word resolution has several meanings, depending on context. ...


The dynamics of saccadic eye motion give insight into the complexity of the mechanism that controls the motion of the eye. The saccade is the fastest movement of an external part of the human body. The peak angular speed of the eye during a saccade reaches up to 1000 degrees per second. Saccades last from about 20–800 milliseconds.


The duration of a saccade depends on its amplitude. The amplitude of a saccade is the angular distance that the eye needs to travel during a particular saccade. For amplitudes of up to about 60 degrees, the duration of a saccade linearly depends on the amplitude. In that range, the peak velocity of a saccade also linearly depends on the amplitude. In saccades larger than about 60 degrees, the peak velocity remains constant at the maximum velocity attainable by the eye. Thus, the duration of these large saccades is no longer linearly dependent on the amplitude.


During the saccade, no information is passed through the optic nerve to the brain. Transmission ceases as soon as the eyeball starts to move, and starts again as soon as the eyeball stops. This is similar to the situation with a motion picture camera: exposure is made only when the film is stopped behind the lens. A shutter closes just before film starts to move, and opens again when the film is stationary on the next frame. A good way for you to see this effect is to stand 18 inches away from a mirror and look at your left eye, then look at your right eye, then look back at the left, and so on. You will not see any movement of your eyes, nor any evidence that the optic nerve has momentarily ceased transmitting. A companion standing next to you, however, will see your eyes shifting rapidly side to side. Due to saccadic masking, the eye/brain system not only hides your eye movements from you, it hides evidence that anything has been hidden. A saccade is a fast eye motion, and because it is a motion that is optimised for speed, there is inevitable blurring of the image on the retina, as the retina is sweeping the visual field. ...


In addition to the kind of saccades described above, the human eye is in a constant state of vibration, oscillating back and forth at a rate of about 60 per second. These microsaccades are tiny movements, roughly 20 arcseconds in excursion, and completely imperceptible under normal circumstances. They serve to refresh the image being cast onto the rod cells and cone cells at the back of the eye. If there were no microsaccades, staring fixedly at something would cause the vision to cease after a few seconds since rods and cones only respond to a change in luminance. Microsaccades are a kind of fixational eye movement. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Saccade - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (840 words)
One reason for saccades of the human eye is that only the central part of the retina, the fovea, has a high concentration of color sensitive photoreceptor cells called cone cells.
In saccades larger than 60 degrees, the peak velocity remains constant at the maximum velocity attainable by the eye.
This phenomenon, known as saccadic masking or saccadic suppression, is known to occur in the time preceding a saccadic eye movement, suggesting that there are neurological functions at work rather than simple mechanical or optical functions, such as retinal blur.
SACCADE TESTS (4202 words)
Saccadic velocity cannot be altered voluntarily and is not affected substantially by age or gender.
Saccadic latencies are calculated from the difference in time between target displacement and the onset of the first saccade towards the new target position.
Normal saccadic latencies are independent of target amplitude and are insensitive to the method used to record eye movements, but vary according to target luminance, size, contrast, whether the target is visual, auditory or both, and the predictability of the target (Leigh and Zee, 1991).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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