A discontinuity in motion perception during fixational drift

The human visual system is tasked with perceiving stable and moving objects despite ever-present eye movements. Normally, our visual system performs this task exceptionally well; indeed, under conditions with frames of reference, our ability to detect relative motion exceeds the sampling limits of f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inbioRxiv
Main Authors D'Angelo, Josephine C, Tiruveedhula, Pavan, Weber, Raymond J, Arathorn, David W, Otero-Millan, Jorge, Roorda, Austin
Format Journal Article Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 06.06.2025
Edition1.1
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Summary:The human visual system is tasked with perceiving stable and moving objects despite ever-present eye movements. Normally, our visual system performs this task exceptionally well; indeed, under conditions with frames of reference, our ability to detect relative motion exceeds the sampling limits of foveal cones. However, during fixational drift, if an image is programmed to move in a direction consistent with retinal slip, little to no motion is perceived, even if this motion is amplified. We asked: Would a stimulus moving in a direction consistent with retinal slip, but with a smaller magnitude across the retina, also appear relatively stable? We used an adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscope to deliver stimuli that moved contingent to retinal motion and measured subjects' perceived motion, under conditions with world-fixed background content. We also tested under conditions with background content closer and farther from the stimuli. We found a sharp discontinuity in motion perception. Stimuli moving in a direction consistent with retinal slip, no matter how small, appear to have relatively little to no motion; while, stimuli moving in the same direction as eye motion appear to be moving. Displacing background content to greater than 4° from the stimuli diminishes the effects of this phenomenon.
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Competing Interest Statement: P.T. and A.R. are co-inventors on US Patent #10130253, assigned to the University of California.
ISSN:2692-8205
2692-8205
DOI:10.1101/2025.06.02.657265