User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
/sə'kɑ:d/Noun
- a sudden jerking movement
- a rapid jerky movement
of the eye (voluntary or
involuntary) from one focus to another
-
- 1993: He added the bill with a single saccade of his pulsing eyes. — Will Self, My Idea of Fun
-
- the act of checking a horse quickly with a single strong pull of the reins
- the sounding of two violin strings together by using a sudden strong pressure of the bow
French
Pronunciation
- /sakad/
Noun
saccade f- a jerk
Extensive Definition
- For the anti-ship missile, see C-802.
Function
Humans and other animals do not look at a scene in a steady way. Instead, the eyes move around, locating interesting parts of the scene and building up a mental 'map' corresponding to the scene. One reason for saccades of the human eye is that the central part of the retina, the fovea, plays a critical role in resolving objects. By moving the eye so that small parts of a scene can be sensed with greater resolution, body resources can be used more efficiently.Velocity and duration
The dynamics of saccadic eye motion give insight into the complexity of the mechanism that controls the motion of the eye. The saccade is the fastest movement of an external part of the human body. The peak angular speed of the eye during a saccade reaches up to 1000 degrees per second. Saccades last from about 20 to 200 milliseconds.The duration of a saccade depends on its amplitude. The amplitude of a
saccade is the angular distance that the eye needs to travel during
the movement. For amplitudes up to about 60 degrees, the duration
of a saccade linearly depends on the amplitude (so called "saccadic
main sequence"). In saccades larger than 60 degrees, the peak
velocity remains
constant at the maximum velocity attainable by the eye. Thus, the
duration of these large saccades is no longer linearly dependent on
the amplitude.
In addition to the kind of saccades described
above, the human eye is in a constant state of vibration,
oscillating back and forth at a rate of about 60 Hz. These microsaccades are tiny
movements, roughly 20 arcseconds in excursion and
are completely imperceptible under normal circumstances. They serve
to refresh the image being cast onto the rod cells and cone cells
at the back of the eye. Without microsaccades, staring fixedly at
something would cause the vision to cease after a few seconds since
rods and cones only respond to a change in luminance.
Pathophysiologic saccades
Saccadic oscillations not filling the normal function are a deviation from a healthy or normal condition.Causes
- Nystagmus is characterised by the combination of a smooth pursuit, which usually acts to take the eye off the point of regard, interspersed with the saccadic movement that serves to bring the eye back on target.
- Opsoclonus or ocular flutter, on the other hand, are composed purely of fast-phase saccadic eye movements.
Saccade adaptation
When the brain is led to believe that the saccades it is generating are too large or too small (by an experimental manipulation in which a saccade-target steps back or forward, contingent on the eye movement made to acquire it), saccade amplitude gradually decreases (or increases), an adaptation (also termed gain adaptation) widely seen as a simple form of motor learning, possibly driven by an effort to correct visual error. This effect was first discovered in humans with ocular muscle weakness brought on by disease or tenectomy. In these cases, it was noticed that the patients would make hypometric (small) saccades with the affected eye, and that they were able to correct these errors over time. This led to the realization that visual error (the difference between the intended past-saccadic point of regard and the target position) played a role in the homeostatic regulation of accurate saccades. Since then, much scientific research has been devoted to various experiments employing saccade adaptation.Saccadic masking
It is a common but false belief that during the saccade, no information is passed through the optic nerve to the brain. Whereas low spatial frequencies (the 'fuzzier' parts) are attenuated, higher spatial frequencies (an image's fine details) which would otherwise be blurred out by the eye movement remain unaffected. This phenomenon, known as saccadic masking or saccadic suppression, is known to occur in the time preceding a saccadic eye movement, implying neurological reasons for the effect, rather than simply the image's motion blur.A person may observe the saccadic masking effect
by standing in front of a mirror and looking from one eye to the
next (and vice versa). The subject will not experience any movement
of the eyes nor any evidence that the optic nerve has momentarily
ceased transmitting. Due to saccadic masking, the eye/brain system
not only hides the eye movements from the individual but also hides
the evidence that anything has been hidden. Of course, a second
observer watching the experiment will see the subject's eyes moving
back and forth.
Comparative physiology
Saccades are a widespread phenomenon across animals with image-forming visual systems. They have been observed in animals across three phyla, including animals that do not have a fovea (most vertebrates do not) and animals that cannot move their eyes independently of their head (such as insects). Therefore, while saccades serve in humans and other primates to increase the effective visual resolution of a scene, there must be additional reasons for the behavior. The most frequently suggested of these reasons is to avoid blurring of the image, which would occur if the response time of a photoreceptor is longer than the time a given portion of the image is stimulating that photoreceptor as the image drifts across the eye.In birds, saccadic eye movements serve a further
function. The avian retina is highly developed. It is thicker than
the mammalian retina and has a higher metabolic activity, but it
lacks proper vasculature.
Therefore, the retinal cells must obtain nutrients via diffusion
through the choroid and
from the vitreous
humor. The pecten is a
specialised structure in the avian retina. It is a highly vascular
structure that projects into the vitreous humor. Experimentally, it
has been shown that during saccadic eye oscillations (which occupy
up to 12% of avian viewing time), the pecten acts as an agitator,
propelling perfusate
towards the retina. Thus, in birds, saccadic eye movements appear
to be important in retinal nutrition and respiration.
See also
References
saccade in Spanish: Sacadas
saccade in Italian: Saccade
saccade in Dutch: Saccade
saccade in Russian: Саккада