Print

Print


Eileen,

My original reply was rejected by the list so here it is again.

We have done lots of work on this in adults in the past. Try our website:
http://www2.umist.ac.uk/optometry/ and look under research/Visuomotor
mechanisms in eye, head and hand coordination.

or, even better, come to the British Oculomotor Group (BOMG) meeting this
Friday (9th Jan) at UMIST. Programme is attached. Registration at the door.
Graham Barnes


BOMG meeting UMIST 9th Jan 2004

9.30 am Registration, Coffee, Exhibitors and Posters (Departmental library)

MORNING SESSION - Invited speakers.             CHAIRMAN:  Graham Barnes, UMIST, UK

10.15 am        Optimisation in eye movement control
        Christopher Harris (University of Plymouth, UK)

11.05 am        Error signals for oculomotor learning
        Maarten Fens (Erasmus University, The Netherlands)

11.55 am        Future trends in clinical eye movement research
        Christopher Kennard (Imperial College, London, UK)


12.45 - 2.15 pm Lunch in the Harwood Room.      Exhibitors and Presentations
                                        Cambridge Research Systems, SR Research, Tracksys

AFTERNOON SESSION - Open contributions.  CHAIRMAN:  Richard Abadi, UMIST, UK

2.15 pm Acquired unilateral vertical nystagmus following severe monocular
visual loss.
        Gemma Hocking (Manchester Eye Hospital, UK)

2.30 pm Saccades can’t help: the effect of the Müller-Lyer illusion on
perception and two actions.
        Paul Knox (Liverpool University, UK)

2.45 pm Attention and target selection for predictive smooth pursuit eye
movements.
        Ellen Poliakoff (Manchester University, UK, Sue Collins and Graham Barnes
(UMIST, UK)

3.00 pm Impulsivity and eye movements: some preliminary findings.
        S.B. Hutton, M.J. Morgan, S. Puchalska and R.D. Rogers (University of
Sussex, UK)

3.15 pm Refreshments (Departmental Library)

3.30 pm Visual scanpaths in schizophrenic patients.
        Lo Bour (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

3.45 pm VOR adaptation: computational analysis points to multiple sites of
plasticity.
        John Porrill and Paul Dean (University of Sheffield, UK)

4.00 pm Neural integrator drift.
        Chris Timms (Institute of Child Health, London, UK)

4.15 pm Age-related changes in head and eye co-ordination.
        Frank Proudlock, Himanshu Shekhar and Irene Gottlob (University of
Leicester, UK)

4.30 pm       Imaging task level oculomotor control: fMRI studies of pro /
anti saccade switching
                      Tim Hodgson. (University of Exeter)
General discussion

5.00 pm Close of meeting followed by refreshments



-----Original Message-----
From: Eye-movement mailing list [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On
Behalf Of E.Mansfield
Sent: 07 January 2004 10:41
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [EM_LIST] Anticipatory eye movements


Hi everyone,

I am trying to find information on anticipatory eye movements in both
adults and infants,. Can anyone point me in the right direction.

Thanks in advance

Regards,
Eileen

Eileen Mansfield
FELS / CHDL
240D Briggs Building
Open  University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes
MK 7 6AA

Tel: 01908 858824
Fax: 01908 858868

email: [log in to unmask]

--
EYE-MOVEMENT mailing list ([log in to unmask])
N.B. Replies are sent to the list, not the sender
To unsubscribe, etc. see
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/files/eye-movement/introduction.html
Other queries to list owner at [log in to unmask]

--
EYE-MOVEMENT mailing list ([log in to unmask])
N.B. Replies are sent to the list, not the sender
To unsubscribe, etc. see http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/files/eye-movement/introduction.html
Other queries to list owner at [log in to unmask]