A very subtle and seemingly random type of eye movement called ocular drift can be influenced by prior knowledge of the expected visual target, suggesting a surprising level of cognitive control over ...
Learn what afterimages can teach us about how our brains predict our visual movements.
Scientists find vision slightly lags behind eye movement, revealing how the brain predicts motion to keep the world stable.
Researchers use afterimages to prove the brain predicts eye movements with 94% accuracy, revealing the internal "efference copy" mechanism that keeps our vision stable.
Ghostly afterimages are the result of our brain stabilizing our vision, according to German researchers who investigated the process.
When our eyes move during REM sleep, we’re gazing at things in the dream world our brains have created, according to a new study by researchers at UC San Francisco. The findings shed light not only ...