posted on 2025-07-11, 11:57authored byRozana Ovsepian, David SoutoDavid Souto, Alexander C Schütz
Perceptual and sensorimotor learning is often specific to the trained stimuli and movement parameters. This specificity also applies to recalibrating sensory and motor maps, such as saccadic eye movements in response to systematic visual errors. Here, we show that the perceptual recalibration of stationarity during smooth pursuit eye movements generalizes to untrained eye movement speeds. During smooth pursuit, the retinal image motion of the stationary surround (reafference) must be compensated to maintain perceptual stability. Prior research revealed that the predicted reafference signal is continuously updated through interactions between the motor command and experienced retinal motion and is specific to movement direction and visual field location. Here, we show that stationarity recalibration transfers across pursuit speeds. The generalization pattern reveals two distinct mechanisms: a multiplicative gain for decreasing predicted reafference signals and a constant shift for increasing signals. The former is consistent with a gain control model of smooth pursuit.<p></p>
Funding
Research Cluster “The Adaptive Mind,” funded by the Excellence Program of the Hessian Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Art.
History
Author affiliation
College of Life Sciences
Psychology & Vision Sciences
Eye-movement data and perceptual data have been deposited at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15078450 and are publicly available as of the date of publication. DOIs are listed in the key resources table.
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This paper does not report original code.
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Any additional information required to reanalyze the data reported in this paper is available from the lead contact upon request.