# Vision, Attention and Eye Movements at the Scale of the Foveola

> **NIH NIH R01** · UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER · 2021 · $373,450

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY
Humans rely on the foveola, the region of the retina where cones are most densely packed, for exploring
the visual scene at high resolution. Although the foveola only covers a tiny portion of the visual ﬁeld—
approximately the size of a full moon—, damage to this area has devastating consequences for most daily
visual activities. Yet, primarily as a consequence of technical challenges, little is known about the mechanisms
of foveal vision and the sensorimotor strategies by which humans achieve high visual acuity.
 A major difﬁculty in studying foveal functions comes from the need to ﬁnely control retinal stimulation. At
this scale, both placing and maintaining a stimulus at a desired eccentricity is difﬁcult, because of uncertainty
in localizing the center of gaze (typically as large as the foveola itself), and because of the continual retinal
motion caused by ﬁxational eye movements, the slow eye drifts and small saccades that humans continually
perform. The PI and her coworkers have recently circumvented these limitations and developed new methods
for mapping visual functions at the very center of gaze. Their research has shown that pattern vision varies
sharply across the foveola, and that both attention and eye movements are precisely controlled at this scale.
 These previous ﬁndings raise a fundamental hypothesis: high acuity vision does not follow automatically
from placing the stimulus on the foveola, but it is the outcome of an orchestrated synergy of visual, motor,
and attentional components, which closely cooperate to sequentially extract ﬁne spatial information from the
foveal region. This project is designed to investigate this hypothesis, in three strongly inter-connected aims,
we will examine the role of attention in high acuity vision (Aim 1), how it is modulated by microsaccades (Aim
3), and how both attention and microsaccades deal with limits in visual processing of ﬁne patterns (Aim 2).
Speciﬁcally, in Aim 1, we will build upon our previous work on the ﬁne control of voluntary attention within the
foveola and study the spatial resolution of this phenomenon, its temporal dynamics, and whether it extends
to involuntary attention. In Aim 2, we will map visual acuity across the foveal space and examine how visual
acuity and crowding vary within the foveola. In Aim 3, we will investigate the accuracy and precision of mi-
crosaccades, their contributions to alleviating physiological limitations in acuity and crowding, and their links
to attentional control within the foveola. The interplay of vision, attention, and oculomotor activity will be stud-
ied not just in general terms (average results across observers) but also at the individual level, to determine
whether the degree of attentional and motor control covary and whether the latter is linked to idiosyncratic
differences in acuity. Our main hypothesis that ﬁne spatial vision is the outcome of a sensorimotor interaction
bears several important consequences. It ra...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10132333
- **Project number:** 5R01EY029788-03
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
- **Principal Investigator:** Martina Poletti
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $373,450
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-02-01 → 2024-01-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10132333

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10132333, Vision, Attention and Eye Movements at the Scale of the Foveola (5R01EY029788-03). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10132333. Licensed CC0.

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