William Payne, Chris Harris, Peter West
ECEM, August 2005
SensoriMotor Laboratory, Neuroscience, University of
Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth, PL4 8AA
Cambridge Research Systems, 80 Riverside, Sir Thomas Longley Road, Rochester,
Kent, ME2 4BH

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Abstract
Keywords: contingent display saccade adaptive control
Understanding saccade adaptive control requires an intra-saccadic stimulus
change to be performed during the ongoing saccade. Unfortunately, the limited
availability of saccade contingent displays has limited research in this
area. An obvious choice for a stimulus presentation system is a computer
controlled CRT display. However, this potentially suffers from artifacts
caused by frame-period quantization.
We explore a method for saccade contingent display on a CRT is described
which has been developed and tested using Scalar IRIS infra-red limbus tracker
and a Cambridge Research Systems Visage Visual Stimulus Generator.
A prosaccade task was used to illicit the eye movements which controlled
a 167 Hz CRT display. A video frame-synchronized digital signal processing
system was used to sample, filter and differentiate the eye movement data,
which was then evaluated against a simple velocity threshold. Upon saccade
detection, the stimulus display was modified according to the experimental
protocol.
Preliminary data indicates a variable frame update delay of 15-25 ms. Thus,
this novel technique allows an arbitrary change in the visual display during
saccades of modest amplitudes. This study suggests that it will be possible
to investigate saccade adaptive control using readily available technology,
and to have unprecedented flexibility in the control of the contingent image
properties.
William Payne was formerly a Student Staff Scientist at Cambridge Research
Systems, studying with an Industrial
Fellowship from the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851.
Professor
Chris Harris runs the SensoriMotor
Lab at the University of Plymouth.
Peter West is a Director of Cambridge Research Systems.
Copyright © Cambridge Research Systems Ltd. Click for details.
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