Search results for "Eye position"

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The Effects of Hemianopia on Perception of Mutual Gaze

2019

Significance Individuals with left hemianopic field loss (HFL), especially with neglect history, may have greater difficulties than individuals with right HFL in judging the direction of another person's gaze. Purpose Individuals with HFL often show a spatial bias in laboratory-based perceptual tasks. We investigated whether such biases also manifest in a more real-world task, perception of mutual gaze direction, an important, nonverbal communication cue in social interactions. Methods Participants adjusted the eye position of a life-size virtual head on a monitor at a 1-m distance until (1) the eyes appeared to be looking straight at them, or (2) the eyes were perceived to be no longer loo…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectFixation OcularArticleFunctional LateralityNeglect03 medical and health sciencesNonverbal communicationOcular physiology0302 clinical medicinePerceptionHumansAgedmedia_commonSpatial biasMiddle AgedGazeOphthalmologyEye positionSpace PerceptionFixation (visual)Visual Perception030221 ophthalmology & optometryHemianopsiaFemaleVisual FieldsPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryOptometryCognitive psychologyOptometry and Vision Science
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Eye position tunes the contribution of allocentric and egocentric information to target localization in human goal-directed arm movements.

1997

Subjects were required to point to the distant vertex of the closed and the open configurations of the Muller-Lyer illusion using either their right hand (experiment 1) or their left hand (experiment 2). In both experiments the Muller-Lyer figures were horizontally presented either in the left or in the right hemispace and movements were executed using either foveal or peripheral vision of the target. According to the illusion effect, subjects undershot and overshot the vertex location of the closed and the open configuration, respectively. The illusion effect decreased when the target was fixated and when the stimulus was positioned in the right hemispace. These results confirm the hypothe…

Adultright cerebral hemisphereEye Movementsmedia_common.quotation_subjectArm; psychomotor performance; illusions; dominance cerebral; video recording; eye movements; adult; humansIllusionVideo RecordingPoison controlStimulus (physiology)dominanceSettore BIO/09FovealPerceptionHumansComputer visioneye positionDominance Cerebralpointing kinematicsmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMüller-Lyer illusionBody movementIllusionsPeripheral visionArmcerebralegocentric and allocentric frame of referenceArtificial intelligenceMuller-Lyer illusionPsychologybusinessPsychomotor PerformanceNeuroscience letters
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