mikrosakkader
Mikrosakkader, known in English as micro-saccades, are small, rapid, involuntary eye movements that occur when a person attempts to fixate on a visual target. Their amplitude is typically a fraction of a degree of visual angle, commonly around 0.2 to 1 degree, with durations of tens of milliseconds and peak velocities that can reach several tens to hundreds of degrees per second.
These movements arise from the same oculomotor circuitry that generates larger saccades, involving brain structures such
The primary function of mikrosakkader is to prevent perceptual fading of the stationary image on the retina
Measurement and study of micro-saccades rely on high-resolution eye-tracking techniques. Video-based trackers with high sampling rates