grant

Effects of saccadic eye movements on perception and visual memory. [ 2004 - 2006 ]

Also known as: How the brain keeps the world stable when we move our eyes.

Research Grant

[Cite as http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/303133]

Researchers: E/Pr John Ross (Principal investigator) ,  Prof David Burr

Brief description We all make rapid eye movements, called saccades, three times a second all our waking lives. They allow us to direct our gaze at what catches our attention, but they sweep images across our retinas and alter all the linkages between the eyes and the brain. The question at the heart of this project is how the visual system maintains perceptual stability given the disruption to the flow of visual input that saccades necessarily cause. It has to do more than suppress disturbing signals; it has to link the present with the past. In recent years we and others have made substantial progress toward answering this question. In this project we plan a four-pronged attack that will take us further. We anticipate that our results will reveal how the visual system maintains and adjusts its representations of space and time, integrates signals from before and after saccades, and regulates the flow of information from memory to achieve a seamless melding of the present with the past. This project is not directed at any particular clinical problem, but disturbances of perception and memory are aspects of many clinical conditions. If we succeed in our aims what we discover will constitute a major scientific discovery which should find application to many conditions in which perception and memory are disturbed, from dyslexia to brain damage and even affective disorders such as schizophrenia and depression.

Funding Amount $AUD 255,750.00

Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants

Notes Standard Project Grant

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