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Inhibition of saccade initiation by preceding smooth pursuit
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Research Article
Inhibition of saccade initiation by preceding smooth pursuit
R. Kanai1, J. van der Geest1 and M. Frens1 
| (1) |
Department of Neuroscience, EE1579, Erasmus MC, P.O. Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands, |
| (2) |
Universiteit Utrecht, Helmholtz Research Institute, Psychonomics Division, The Netherlands, |
Received: 24 May 2001 Accepted: 11 September 2002
Abstract. In this study, we investigated the influence of smooth-pursuit eye movements on saccade initiation in response to a sudden
jump of a continuously moving target. We replicated the finding by Tanaka et al. (1998) that saccadic eye movements in the
direction opposite to preceding pursuit have longer latencies than those in the same direction. We confirmed that this asymmetry
is indeed due to an inhibitory effect of smooth pursuit on saccade initiation in the opposite direction rather than facilitation
of saccade initiation in the same direction. The inhibitory effect decreased strongly when subjects knew the jump direction
in advance. This supports the notion that the prolonged latencies of backward saccades are not due to orbital mechanics or
low-level motor processing. Furthermore, we found that the range of saccade directions inhibited by a pursuit movement is
broad, covering all directions that did not have the same horizontal component as the pursuit direction. This is in contrast
with the predictions of "Inhibition of Saccade Return" (ISR, Hooge and Frens 2000), which is restricted to a smaller confined
area.
Inhibition of return Human Oculomotor Attention
Electronic Publication
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