
pmid: 9347562
The current experiment examined the speed-accuracy trade-off of saccadic movement between two targets. Ten subjects looked alternately at two targets as fast and as accurately as possible for 2 min. under different conditions of target size, distance between targets, and direction of eye movement. Saccadic movement of the left eye was tracked and recorded with an infrared eye monitoring device to compute the starting position, ending position, and duration of each saccadic movement. Eye-movement time was significantly related to target size and distance between targets, but the speed-accuracy trade-off was significantly different from that predicted by Fitts' Law. Reaction time was not significantly changed by the direction of eye movement.
Adult, Male, Analysis of Variance, Time Factors, Distance Perception, Fixation, Ocular, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Reaction Time, Saccades, Humans, Female, Size Perception
Adult, Male, Analysis of Variance, Time Factors, Distance Perception, Fixation, Ocular, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Reaction Time, Saccades, Humans, Female, Size Perception
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