The Joy of Retinal Painting: A Build-It-Yourself Device for Intrasaccadic Presentations

Abstract

As the eyes move, they incessantly impose motion blur on the retinal image, yet our perception of the world remains undisturbed. In fact, it is often assumed that intrasaccadic visual signals are largely eliminated from processing by a dedicated suppression mechanism. Here, we describe an easy-to-build presentation device that produces a stimulus that is highly salient and well resolvable during saccades. Using LED strips with high temporal resolution, any type of text and image stimulus can be presented in an anorthoscopic fashion – as if seen through and travelling behind a narrow slit – at very short durations. Whereas these stimuli appear as a brief flash during fixation, saccades spread them across the retina, producing spatially extended and well-resolved retinal images. In fact, retinally painted images induced by saccades across a series of anorthoscopic image presentations were correctly identified by observers in 90% of all cases. So why should we suppress intrasaccadic perception if it enables us to experience the joy of retinal painting?

Publication
In Perception

Everyone knows this nice party trick: Try to observe your own rapid eye movements (so-called saccades) in the mirror – and realize that you will not be able to. Despite this striking example, we are not blind during saccades. This paper features a demonstration (as well as schematics and code to built it yourself) that is capable of producing highly salient, nicely resolvable stimuli which can only be perceived during saccades!

Richard Schweitzer
Richard Schweitzer
Postdoc in Vision Science

Passionate about psychophysics, eye tracking, M/EEG, and computational modeling.