Journal article

A comparison of pursuit eye movement and perceptual performance in speed discrimination


Authors listGegenfurtner, KR; Xing, DJ; Scott, BH; Hawken, MJ

Publication year2003

Pages865-876

JournalJournal of Vision

Volume number3

Issue number11

ISSN1534-7362

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1167/3.11.19

PublisherAssociation for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology


Abstract
Currently there is considerable debate as to the nature of the pathways that are responsible for the perception and motor performance. We have studied the relationship between perceived speed, which is the experiential representation of a moving stimulus, and the speed of smooth pursuit eye movements, the motor action. We determined psychophysical thresholds for detecting small perturbations in the speed of moving patterns, and then by an ideal observer analysis computed analogous "oculometric" thresholds from the eye movement traces elicited by the same stimuli on the same trials. Our results confirm those of previous studies that show a remarkable agreement between perceptual judgments for speed discrimination and the fine gradations in eye movement speed. We analyzed the initial pursuit period of long duration (1000 ms) and short (200 ms) duration perturbations. When we compared the errors for perception and pursuit on a trial-by-trial basis there was no correlation between perceptual errors and eye movement errors. The observation that both oculometric and psychometric performance were similar, with Weber fractions in the normal range, but that there is no correlation in the errors suggests that the motor system and perception share the same constraints in their analysis of motion signals, but act independently and have different noise sources. We simulated noise in two models of perceptual and eye movement performance. In the first model we postulate an initial common source for the perceptual and eye movement signals. In that case about ten times the observed noise is required to produce no correlation in trial-by-trial performance. In the second model we postulate that the perceptual signal is a combination of a reafferent eye velocity signal plus the perturbation signal while the pursuit signal is derived from the oculomotor plant plus the perturbation signal. In this model about three times the noise level in the independent signals will mask any correlation due to the common perturbation signal.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGegenfurtner, K., Xing, D., Scott, B. and Hawken, M. (2003) A comparison of pursuit eye movement and perceptual performance in speed discrimination, Journal of Vision, 3(11), pp. 865-876. https://doi.org/10.1167/3.11.19

APA Citation styleGegenfurtner, K., Xing, D., Scott, B., & Hawken, M. (2003). A comparison of pursuit eye movement and perceptual performance in speed discrimination. Journal of Vision. 3(11), 865-876. https://doi.org/10.1167/3.11.19


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 09:31