Volume 3, Number 11
doi:10.1167/3.11
http://journalofvision.org/3/11/
ISSN 1534-7362
Masthead
Special Issue Introduction
i
Linking eye movements and perception
Leland S. Stone
Frederick A. Miles
Martin S. Banks
Articles
1
Pursuit of the ineffable: perceptual and motor reversals during the tracking of apparent motion
Laurent Madelain
Richard J. Krauzlis
2
Perception can influence the vergence responses associated with open-loop gaze shifts in 3D
Boris M. Sheliga
Frederick A. Miles
3
Eye-movements aid the control of locomotion
Richard M. Wilkie
John P. Wann
4
Perceived slant from Werner’s illusion affects binocular saccadic eye movements
Martin H. Both
Raymond van Ee
Casper J. Erkelens
5
Perceptual and oculomotor evidence of limitations on processing accelerating motion
Scott N. J. Watamaniuk
Stephen J. Heinen
6
Thresholds for stereo-slant discrimination between spatially separated targets are influenced mainly by visual and memory factors but not oculomotor instability
Zhi-Lei Zhang
Ellen M. Berends
Clifton M. Schor
7
Shared motion signals for human perceptual decisions and oculomotor actions
Leland S. Stone
Richard J. Krauzlis
8
The contribution of vergence change to the measurement of relative disparity
Benjamin T. Backus
Daniel Matza-Brown
9
Differential effects of the Müller-Lyer illusion on reflexive and voluntary saccades
Jason S. McCarley
Arthur F. Kramer
Gregory J. DiGirolamo
10
Smooth anticipatory eye movements alter the memorized position of flashed targets
Gunnar Blohm
Marcus Missal
Philippe Lefèvre
11
The extra-retinal motion aftereffect
Tom C. A. Freeman
Jane H. Sumnall
Robert J. Snowden
12
Eye movements facilitate stereo-slant discrimination when horizontal disparity is noisy
Ellen M. Berends
Zhi-Lei Zhang
Clifton M. Schor
13
The consistency of bisection judgments in visual grasp space
Julia Trommershäuser
Laurence T. Maloney
Michael S. Landy
14
The reentry hypothesis: linking eye movements to visual perception
Fred H. Hamker
15
Task demands and binocular eye movements
Andrew E. Welchman
Julie M. Harris
16
Human discrimination of visual direction of motion with and without smooth pursuit eye movements
Anton E. Krukowski
Kathleen A. Pirog
Brent R. Beutter
Kevin R. Brooks
Leland S. Stone
17
Depth from motion parallax scales with eye movement gain
Mark Nawrot
18
Contributions of fixational eye movements to the discrimination of briefly presented stimuli
Michele Rucci
Gaëlle Desbordes
19
A comparison of pursuit eye movement and perceptual performance in speed discrimination
Karl R. Gegenfurtner
Dajun Xing
Brian H. Scott
Michael J. Hawken
20
Saccade target selection in visual search: Accuracy improves when more distractors are present
Eugene McSorley
John M. Findlay
21
The distribution of visual objects on the retina: connecting eye movements and cone distributions
Alex Lewis
Raquel Garcia
Li Zhaoping
22
Expansion of visual space after saccadic eye movements
Soohyun Cho
Choongkil Lee
This special issue was made possible in part by support from NASA Ames Research Center,
Human Factors Research and Technology Division
, and the NASA
Aviation Safety and Security Program
.
jov