The effects of fixation target size and luminance on microsaccades and square-wave jerks
Average rating
Cast your vote
You can rate an item by clicking the amount of stars they wish to award to this item.
When enough users have cast their vote on this item, the average rating will also be shown.
Star rating
Your vote was cast
Thank you for your feedback
Thank you for your feedback
Author
McCamy, Michael B.Najafian Jazi, Ali
Otero-Millan, Jorge
Macknik, Stephen L.
Martinez-Conde, Susana
Journal title
PeerJDate Published
2013-02-12Publication Volume
1Publication Begin page
e9
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A large amount of classic and contemporary vision studies require subjects to fixate a target. Target fixation serves as a normalizing factor across studies, promoting the field's ability to compare and contrast experiments. Yet, fixation target parameters, including luminance, contrast, size, shape and color, vary across studies, potentially affecting the interpretation of results. Previous research on the effects of fixation target size and luminance on the control of fixation position rendered conflicting results, and no study has examined the effects of fixation target characteristics on square-wave jerks, the most common type of saccadic intrusion. Here we set out to determine the effects of fixation target size and luminance on the characteristics of microsaccades and square-wave jerks, over a large range of stimulus parameters. Human subjects fixated a circular target with varying luminance and size while we recorded their eye movements with an infrared video tracker (EyeLink 1000, SR Research). We detected microsaccades and SWJs automatically with objective algorithms developed previously. Microsaccade rates decreased linearly and microsaccade magnitudes increased linearly with target size. The percent of microsaccades forming part of SWJs decreased, and the time from the end of the initial SWJ saccade to the beginning of the second SWJ saccade (SWJ inter-saccadic interval; ISI) increased with target size. The microsaccadic preference for horizontal direction also decreased moderately with target size . Target luminance did not affect significantly microsaccades or SWJs, however. In the absence of a fixation target, microsaccades became scarcer and larger, while SWJ prevalence decreased and SWJ ISIs increased. Thus, the choice of fixation target can affect experimental outcomes, especially in human factors and in visual and oculomotor studies. These results have implications for previous and future research conducted under fixation conditions, and should encourage forthcoming studies to report the size of fixation targets to aid the interpretation and replication of their results.Citation
McCamy MB, Najafian Jazi A, Otero-Millan J, Macknik SL, Martinez-Conde S. The effects of fixation target size and luminance on microsaccades and square-wave jerks. PeerJ. 2013 Feb 12;1:e9. doi: 10.7717/peerj.9. PMID: 23638403; PMCID: PMC3628898.DOI
10.7717/peerj.9ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.7717/peerj.9
Scopus Count
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item:
- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Related articles
- Introduction to Special Thematic Issue, part 2 "Microsaccades: Empirical Research and Methodological Advances".
- Authors: Groner R
- Issue date: 2020
- Distinctive features of saccadic intrusions and microsaccades in progressive supranuclear palsy.
- Authors: Otero-Millan J, Serra A, Leigh RJ, Troncoso XG, Macknik SL, Martinez-Conde S
- Issue date: 2011 Mar 23
- Saccades during attempted fixation in parkinsonian disorders and recessive ataxia: from microsaccades to square-wave jerks.
- Authors: Otero-Millan J, Schneider R, Leigh RJ, Macknik SL, Martinez-Conde S
- Issue date: 2013
- Characteristics of Spontaneous Square-Wave Jerks in the Healthy Macaque Monkey during Visual Fixation.
- Authors: Costela FM, Otero-Millan J, McCamy MB, Macknik SL, Di Stasi LL, Rieiro H, Leigh JR, Troncoso XG, Najafian Jazi A, Martinez-Conde S
- Issue date: 2015
- Microsaccades: Empirical Research and Methodological Advances - Introduction to Part 1 of the Thematic Special Issue.
- Authors: Martinez-Conde S, Engbert R, Groner R
- Issue date: 2020 Jun 19