Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA.
Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA.
Nat Commun. 2023 Jan 17;14(1):269. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-35834-4.
It has long been debated how humans resolve fine details and perceive a stable visual world despite the incessant fixational motion of their eyes. Current theories assume these processes to rely solely on the visual input to the retina, without contributions from motor and/or proprioceptive sources. Here we show that contrary to this widespread assumption, the visual system has access to high-resolution extra-retinal knowledge of fixational eye motion and uses it to deduce spatial relations. Building on recent advances in gaze-contingent display control, we created a spatial discrimination task in which the stimulus configuration was entirely determined by oculomotor activity. Our results show that humans correctly infer geometrical relations in the absence of spatial information on the retina and accurately combine high-resolution extraretinal monitoring of gaze displacement with retinal signals. These findings reveal a sensory-motor strategy for encoding space, in which fine oculomotor knowledge is used to interpret the fixational input to the retina.
长期以来,人们一直在争论人类如何解决细微细节问题,并感知稳定的视觉世界,尽管他们的眼睛在不断地进行固视运动。目前的理论假设这些过程仅依赖于视网膜的视觉输入,而不依赖于运动和/或本体感觉来源。在这里,我们表明,与这种普遍的假设相反,视觉系统可以访问关于固视眼动的高分辨率的眼外知识,并利用它来推断空间关系。基于注视相关显示控制的最新进展,我们创建了一个空间辨别任务,其中刺激配置完全由眼动活动决定。我们的结果表明,人类在没有视网膜上的空间信息的情况下正确推断出几何关系,并准确地将高分辨率的眼动位移监测与视网膜信号结合起来。这些发现揭示了一种用于编码空间的感觉运动策略,其中精细的眼动知识用于解释视网膜的固视输入。