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Transsaccadic integration and perceptual continuity.

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    Visual perception remains continuous by combining object features across eye movements (saccades). This process closely follows statistically optimal methods, explaining how we see a smooth world despite discrete visual sampling.

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    Area of Science:

    • Cognitive Neuroscience
    • Visual Perception
    • Psychology

    Background:

    • Visual information is processed during discrete eye fixations, not continuously.
    • Saccadic eye movements interrupt visual input, yet perception appears seamless.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate how perceptual continuity is maintained across saccadic eye movements.
    • To determine if feature information from saccade targets is combined across saccades.

    Main Methods:

    • Two behavioral studies were conducted.
    • Participants' ability to combine feature information across saccades was assessed.

    Main Results:

    • Perceptual continuity is partly achieved by combining feature information of saccade target objects across saccades.
    • This combination process operates in a close-to-statistically optimal manner.

    Conclusions:

    • The brain integrates visual information across saccades to maintain a continuous perception.
    • This integration mechanism is highly efficient, approximating optimal statistical combination.