Emerging evidence shows that small involuntary eye movements (saccades and microsaccades) are a promising new tool for shedding light on the hidden workings of mental processes like attention and ...
Assistive devices that enable those who can no longer move their bodies to control wheelchairs or communicate by moving only ...
Schizophrenia is characterised by notable dysfunctions in eye movement control, which have emerged as promising biomarkers and intermediate phenotypes for the disorder. Abnormalities such as impaired ...
Adolescent girls who consistently avoid looking at negative or critical social cues may be at a higher risk for developing ...
Every time we look at an object or a picture, our eyes make tiny jumps called saccades, followed by brief pauses known as fixations. These rapid movements are guided by the brain, helping us process ...
Saccadic eye movements are rapid, ballistic shifts in gaze that allow the fovea to sample different parts of a visual scene, facilitating high-resolution perception. Research in this area has revealed ...
Rapid side-to-side eye movements can help stabilize posture, avoid falls and maintain balance for people with Parkinson’s disease, just as they can for healthy people. This seemingly counterintuitive ...
Talking while driving is widely recognized as a major source of distraction, but the specific ways conversation interferes with the earliest stages of visual processing have remained largely unclear.
The state of the art self-powered eye tracker harnesses energy from simply blinking - and is as comfortable as everyday ...