Saccade: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "alt=A man that is scanning the environment with high eyes|thumb|'''Figure 1'''. Eye scanning '''A saccade is a rapid eye movement that allows the high-resolution center of the retina (the fovea) to scan the environment.''' These unconscious shifts enable the brain to stitch together a high-definition mental simulation of the world around us.")
 
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[[File:Saccades.png|alt=A man that is scanning the environment with high eyes|thumb|'''Figure 1'''. Eye scanning]]
[[File:Saccades.png|alt=A man that is scanning the environment with high eyes|thumb|'''Figure 1'''. Eye scanning]]
'''A saccade is a rapid eye movement that allows the high-resolution center of the retina (the fovea) to scan the environment.''' These unconscious shifts enable the brain to stitch together a high-definition mental simulation of the world around us.
'''A saccade is a rapid eye movement that allows the high-resolution center of the retina (the fovea) to scan the environment.''' These unconscious shifts enable the brain to stitch together a high-definition mental simulation of the world around us.
The brain assembles saccade fragments into a seamless and stable mental representation of the world. This internal simulation feels continuous and complete, despite being constructed from partial, momentary glimpses. Over time, this stitched-together image becomes so convincing that we mistake it for objective reality itself, unaware that what we "see" is in fact a mental construct—filtered, interpreted, and heavily influenced by attention, memory, and expectation.

Revision as of 23:12, 10 April 2025

A man that is scanning the environment with high eyes
Figure 1. Eye scanning

A saccade is a rapid eye movement that allows the high-resolution center of the retina (the fovea) to scan the environment. These unconscious shifts enable the brain to stitch together a high-definition mental simulation of the world around us.

The brain assembles saccade fragments into a seamless and stable mental representation of the world. This internal simulation feels continuous and complete, despite being constructed from partial, momentary glimpses. Over time, this stitched-together image becomes so convincing that we mistake it for objective reality itself, unaware that what we "see" is in fact a mental construct—filtered, interpreted, and heavily influenced by attention, memory, and expectation.

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