# Function of Fixational Instability During Natural Viewing

> **NIH NIH R01** · UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER · 2020 · $455,642

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY
Human eyes are never at rest. Gaze redirections normally occur 2-3 times/second, separating periods of small,
incessant eye movements. At ﬁrst glance, the function of eye movements seems obvious: they are necessary
to bring and maintain the object of interest within the foveola, the highest acuity region of the retina. However,
an overwhelming body of evidence, in part coming from our NIH-funded research, indicates that this view is
simplistic and that, by reformatting a spatial scene into a spatiotemporal stimulus on the retina, eye movements
serve fundamental visual functions beyond just orienting the foveola. Here we test several new hypotheses
concerning less-obvious but equally critical roles for three main kinds of eye movements: saccades, pursuit, and
ﬁxational drift (the eye jitter that continually occurs during ﬁxation). The research strategy consists of evaluating
the effect of eye movements on the retinal input and the resulting consequences for neural coding, perception, and
control. The experiments rely on state-of-the-art high-resolution measurements of human eye movements and
gaze-contingent control of retinal stimulation. All experiments are supported by mathematical modeling of visual
input signals and neural modeling of their encoding consequences. Aim 1 focuses on the physiological alternation
between saccades and ﬁxational drift. Stereotyped, saccade-induced transients are followed by stereotyped, but
distinct, periods of Brownian-like jitter of the retinal image. Our preliminary analyses show that this alternation
repackages the energy of natural scenes into different spatiotemporal formats, cyclically varying ampliﬁcation
and spectral distribution within the temporal sensitivity bandwidth of retinal neurons. The predicted outcomes
are oculomotor-driven dynamics of visual sensitivity, discrimination, and form perception during natural post-
saccadic ﬁxation, which we will quantify and test. Aim 2 focuses on the saccades themselves. We predict that, as
a consequence of a saccade, the spectral density of the visual input effective in driving retinal neurons at ﬁxation
onset is equalized up to a cut-off spatial frequency that depends on the saccade amplitude. This effect further
constrains visual dynamics and implies that visual coding during early ﬁxation depends on the amplitude of the
preceding saccade. It also suggests that the visual system can exploit this tuning according to the task. We will
test these predictions by isolating the contributions of saccade transients in a variety of low- and high-level visual
tasks. Aim 3 further generalizes these ideas. Building on our modeling work, it examines whether ﬁxational drift
can also be adjusted to tune visual sensitivity to the task demands, and whether the alternation between pursuit
movements and “catch-up” saccades during visual tracking plays a role similar to that of saccade/drift cycle
for static targets. All our hypotheses are supported by preliminary d...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9967000
- **Project number:** 5R01EY018363-14
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
- **Principal Investigator:** MICHELE RUCCI
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $455,642
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2017-09-30 → 2022-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9967000

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9967000, Function of Fixational Instability During Natural Viewing (5R01EY018363-14). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-25 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9967000. Licensed CC0.

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