Seidman S H, Leigh R J, Thomas C W
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University Hospitals, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.
Vision Res. 1992 Jan;32(1):167-71. doi: 10.1016/0042-6989(92)90124-2.
Using the magnetic search coil technique, we measured torsional eye movements in four male subjects during and after rotation of a visual display around the line of sight. During rotation of the display, subjects developed a torsional nystagmus with slow-phases in the direction of target rotation that had a typical gain of less than 0.01. Upon cessation of display motion, subjects experienced a motion after-effect (MAE) in the direction opposite prior target rotation, which persisted for greater than 15 sec. During this MAE, slow-phase eye movements of low velocity were in the same direction as the MAE, but did not persist as long as perceptual effects. In separate experiments, horizontal eye movements were recorded during horizontal stimulus motion; during MAE, no eye movements occurred due to stronger fixation mechanisms. We conclude that MAE is not caused by retinal slip of images, but MAE and the accompanying eye movements might be produced by shared or similar mechanisms.
我们采用磁搜索线圈技术,在视觉显示器绕视线旋转期间及之后,测量了四名男性受试者的眼球扭转运动。在显示器旋转过程中,受试者出现了扭转性眼球震颤,其慢相朝着目标旋转方向,典型增益小于0.01。显示器运动停止后,受试者在先前目标旋转相反的方向经历了运动后效(MAE),该效应持续超过15秒。在这个运动后效期间,低速的慢相眼球运动与运动后效方向相同,但持续时间不如知觉效应长。在单独的实验中,在水平刺激运动期间记录水平眼球运动;在运动后效期间,由于更强的注视机制,未出现眼球运动。我们得出结论,运动后效不是由图像的视网膜滑动引起的,但运动后效及伴随的眼球运动可能由共同或相似的机制产生。