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- W1963600478 abstract "If a target moving at a constant velocity and tracked by the eyes comes to an abrupt stop, it appears to rebound sharply backward. The results reported indicate that the illusion is caused by an unmonitored overshoot of the target by the eyes, which suggests that position information during tracking is derived from efferent signals rather than from proprioceptive feedback from the extraocular muscles. When the eyes pursue a luminous object moving at a constant velocity in a dark field and that object comes to an abrupt and precise stop, it will appear to rebound at the point at which it actually comes to a stop. This is a striking illusion, which to our knowledge has not previously been reported. Its importance lies in what it seems to reveal about the pursuit-movement system and the nature of perception during pursuit eye movements-namely, that during pursuit, proprioceptive feedback from the extraocular muscles appears to provide no useful eye-position information, at least within brief time intervals, and that the perception of object movement or position constancy during pursuit is a function of the relationship between eye-movement and retinal-displacement information." @default.
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- W1963600478 date "1973-06-01" @default.
- W1963600478 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W1963600478 title "A Rebound Illusion in Visual Tracking" @default.
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- W1963600478 doi "https://doi.org/10.2307/1421452" @default.
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