Neural correlates of visual localization and perisaccadic mislocalization
			B. Krekelberg, M. Kubischik, K.-P Hoffmann & F. Bremmer
			Neuron, 6: 537-545, 2003
			 
				- While reading this text, your eyes jump from word to word. Yet you are unaware of the motion this causes on
				your retina; the brain somehow compensates for these displacements and creates a stable percept of the world. This
				compensation is not perfect; perisaccadically, perceptual space is distorted. We show that this distortion can
				be traced to a representation of retinal position in the medial temporal and medial superior temporal areas. These
				cells accurately represent retinal position during fixation, but perisaccadically, the same cells distort the representation
				of space. The time course and magnitude of this distortion are similar to the mislocalization found psychophysically
				in humans. This challenges the assumption in many psychophysical studies that the perisaccadic retinal position
				signal is veridical.
			
  
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