The role of exocentric reference frames in the perception of visual direction
Abstract
One classic piece of evidence for an efference copy signal of eye position is that a small, positive
afterimage viewed in darkness is perceived to move with the eye. When a small stationary reference
point is visible the afterimage appears to move relative to the reference point. However, this is true
only when the afterimage is localized to a small area. We have observed that when an extended
afterimage of a complex scene is generated by a brief, bright flash it does not appear to move, even
with large changes in eye position. When subjects were instructed to maintain their direction of gaze,
we observed small saccades (typically < 1 deg) and slow drift movements often totalling more than
10 deg over a 30 sec period. When the instructions were to simply inspect the extended afterimage,
subjects made larger saccades (up to 5 deg) which were not accompanied by afterimage movement.
The smaller movements observed under the first instructions are greater than those observed in the
dark or with small afterimages. When a visible reference is present with these large afterimages, the
afterimage appears stationary, while the reference point appears to move. Eye position was monitored
following the generation of such afterimages. In general, the perceived motion of the stationary
reference point was in a direction opposite to the motion of the eye. Similar drift movements of smaller
magnitude were observed with localized afterimages, but the motion was attributed to the afterimage.
This suggests that with whole scene afterimages, extraretinal information about slow movements and
small to moderate saccades is absent or suppressed, and that stationarity is assigned to the complex
scene. This indicates a perceptual disposition to rely on visual information (when it is available) for
maintaining constancy of visual direction, despite substantial changes in eye position. We found that
changes in gaze as large as 13 deg produced no change in reported position of the large scene
afterimage. When a small, stationary reference light was present it appeared to move in the afterimage
scene in a way consistent with the recorded eye movements. When observers attempted to maintain
their direction of gaze, most of the eye movements were slow drift, with occasional small saccades.
When the instruction to hold gaze was relaxed, larger saccades up to about 5 deg were observed which
were not accompanied by afterimage movement.