Scientists find vision slightly lags behind eye movement, revealing how the brain predicts motion to keep the world stable.
Discover Magazine on MSN
How our brains predict eye movements — and why afterimages don’t always line up
Learn what afterimages can teach us about how our brains predict our visual movements.
11don MSN
The ghosts we see: Afterimages provide clues to how our brains perceive a stable environment
Our eyes alone do not provide us with a continuous and stable view of the world. They jump several times each second in rapid ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Study: The brain predicts images during eye jumps to stabilize vision
Every time the human eye darts from one point to another, the retinal image smears across the visual field. These rapid jumps, called saccades, happen several times per second, yet the world never ...
Does rapid eye movement during sleep reveal where you’re looking in the scenery of dreams, or are they simply the result of random jerks of our eye muscles? Since the discovery of REM sleep in the ...
Roger Johansson was funded by the Swedish Research Council grant no. 2015-01206 Mikael Johansson was funded by the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation award MAW2015.0043. It could help research in ...
Saccades are the eye movements made to receive visual information and shift the line of vision from one position to another. We rely on the accuracy of saccades every millisecond of our lives. During ...
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