The Free Press Journal

Discovered: New movement of the eye

- London

We probably do it every day but scientists have only now discovered a distinct new way in which we move our eyes. The team from University of Tübingen in Germany assessed the eye movements of 11 participan­ts using tiny wires attached to the cornea and with infrared video tracking, says IANS.

They discovered a new type of eye movement that is synchronis­ed with blinking and helps reset the eye after it twists when viewing a rotating object. It is like avoiding tiny rotations of a camera to stabilise the image people perceive. People do not notice the eye resetting in this way because it happens automatica­lly when they blink.

"We were really surprised to discover this new type of eye movement and it was not what we had anticipate­d from the experiment," said lead author Mohammad Khazali. "We had expected to find that another, already well-known type of eye movement is synchronis­ed to blinking," he added in a paper published in the journal eLife.

Although it is brief, blinking creates an interrupti­on in our visual perception. We spend up to a tenth of our waking hours blinking but hardly notice it. It serves an essential role in lubricatin­g the eye and may even provide the brain with small, frequent mental breaks.

The frequency and size of the movement is determined by how far the eyes have deviated from a neutral position. It helps reduce strain in the eyes as they move to assess the world around us.

In further experiment­s, the scientists discovered that it even occurs when the eye is not tracking a rotating object. "To discover such a ubiquitous phenomenon in such a well-studied part of the human body was astonishin­g to us and we're very grateful to the volunteers who took part in the study," Khazali added.

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