# Function of Fixational Instability During Natural Viewing

> **NIH NIH R01** · UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER · 2024 · $536,500

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY
Humans are not aware that their eyes are always in motion. Even when attending to a single point, ﬁxational
eye movements (FEM) continually shift the stimulus on the retina in ways that would be immediately visible had
the motion originated from objects in the scene rather than oculomotor activity. It is now clear that FEM are
vital for visual sensitivity, ﬁne pattern vision, and acuity. Furthermore, a considerable body of evidence, in part
from our NIH-funded research, indicates that this behavior embodies a sensorimotor strategy by which the visual
system processes spatial information in the temporal domain. While much has been learned about the monoc-
ular functions of FEM, little is known about their consequences for binocular vision. Ocular drifts—the incessant
inter-saccadic movements—differ considerably in the two eyes. How does the visual system combine continually
changing inputs from independently jittering eyes? Here we focus on FEM consequences for 3D spatial repre-
sentations, speciﬁcally their role in stereopsis (Aim 1), their decoding mechanisms (Aim 2), and their binocular
control (Aim 3). The research strategy consists of assessing FEM effects on the binocular visual input and ex-
amining the resulting implications for neural coding, perception, and control. Our driving hypothesis is that the
active space-time encoding strategy that emerged in the monocular processing of luminance also applies to pro-
cessing binocularly-derived features at later stages of the visual stream. Since this theory yields counter-intuitive
hypotheses, each aim builds on a supporting preparatory study that sets the stage for the proposed experiments.
Aim 1 builds on the surprising observation that stereopsis is impaired when ﬁxational disparity modulations are
selectively eliminated from the visual ﬂow, even in the presence of otherwise normal luminance modulations on
the retina. We will explore the causes for this impairment and elucidate FEM contributions. Aim 2 focuses on the
mechanisms by which the ﬁxational visual ﬂow is interpreted. Contrary to traditional assumptions, our prelimi-
nary evidence indicates that the visual system has access to extraretinal knowledge of ocular drift and uses it to
infer spatial relations at high spatiotemporal resolution. Aim 3 examines these ideas in the context of oculomotor
control. We provide the ﬁrst comprehensive high-resolution measurements of head-free binocular FEM in natural
real-world tasks and test the hypothesis that eye drifts are actively controlled to encode task-relevant features
(e.g., disparity, spatial contrast, etc.). The experiments rely on the combination of (a) binocular measurements
of human eye movements with unprecedented accuracy; and (b) highly ﬂexible, binocularly synchronized, gaze-
contingent control of retinal stimulation, an approach made possible by our recent instrumentation developments.
All experiments are theoretically grounded and all hypotheses supported by new...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10899552
- **Project number:** 5R01EY018363-18
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
- **Principal Investigator:** MICHELE RUCCI
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $536,500
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2007-09-01 → 2026-07-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10899552

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10899552, Function of Fixational Instability During Natural Viewing (5R01EY018363-18). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10899552. Licensed CC0.

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