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@ARTICLE{Zimmermann:171801,
      author       = {Zimmermann, E. and Born, S. and Fink, G. R. and Cavanagh,
                      P.},
      title        = {{M}asking produces compression of space and time in the
                      absence of eye movements},
      journal      = {Journal of neurophysiology},
      volume       = {112},
      number       = {12},
      issn         = {0022-3077},
      address      = {Bethesda, Md.},
      publisher    = {Soc.},
      reportid     = {FZJ-2014-05363},
      pages        = {3066-3076},
      year         = {2014},
      abstract     = {Whenever the visual stream is abruptly disturbed by eye
                      movements, blinks, masks, or flashes of light, the visual
                      system needs to retrieve the new locations of current
                      targets and to reconstruct the timing of events to straddle
                      the interruption. This process may introduce position and
                      timing errors. We here report that very similar errors are
                      seen in human subjects across three different paradigms when
                      disturbances are caused by either eye movements, as is well
                      known, or, as we now show, masking. We suggest that the
                      characteristic effects of eye movements on position and
                      time, spatial and temporal compression and saccadic
                      suppression of displacement, are consequences of the
                      interruption and the subsequent reconnection and are seen
                      also when visual input is masked without any eye movements.
                      Our data show that compression and suppression effects are
                      not solely a product of ocular motor activity but instead
                      can be properties of a correspondence process that links the
                      targets of interest across interruptions in visual input, no
                      matter what their source.},
      cin          = {INM-3},
      ddc          = {610},
      cid          = {I:(DE-Juel1)INM-3-20090406},
      pnm          = {333 - Pathophysiological Mechanisms of Neurological and
                      Psychiatric Diseases (POF2-333) / 89572 - (Dys-)function and
                      Plasticity (POF2-89572)},
      pid          = {G:(DE-HGF)POF2-333 / G:(DE-HGF)POF2-89572},
      typ          = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
      UT           = {WOS:000346471200005},
      pubmed       = {pmid:25231617},
      doi          = {10.1152/jn.00156.2014},
      url          = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/171801},
}