THEMATIC COLLECTION: INTRODUCTION
Cortical Indexes of Saccade Planning
in Infants
John E. Richards
Department of Psychology
University of South Carolina
This article briefly reviews the development of cortical involvement in saccadic eye
movement in young infants. A distinction between reflexive and voluntary saccadic
eye movements is made, and developmental changes in the neural systems controlling
these eye movements are discussed. Cortical indexes of saccade planning in adults
have been measured using scalp-recorded, event-related potential (ERP). The ERP
may be useful in distinguishing reflexive and voluntary saccadic eye movements in
infants. In the remainder of this Thematic Collection, 3 studies are introduced that
used ERP measures to infer saccade planning in young infants, and 2 short articles
comment on these studies.
The shift of attention to different regions of space is generally accompanied by eye
movements. Even though shifts of attention may occur without eye movements
(e.g., covert orienting), processing of fine visual detail, color, and form are most
easily done by the fovea. Thus, eye movements function to center the fovea on a
new location or on a stimulus located in a new location. The eye movements that are
used to move the eyes from one location to another are high-velocity saltatory
jumps of the eyes called saccades. Saccades to new locations may be the result of
unexpected stimuli occurring in a location or may be the result of planned shifts of
attention. It is often assumed that very young infants’ saccades are reactive to stim-
uli occurring in new locations and that planned eye movements do not occur in
young infants. This article briefly reviews some background for this assumption
INFANCY, 2(2), 123–133
Copyright © 2001, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Requests for reprints should be sent to John E. Richards, Department of Psychology, University of
South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208. E-mail: richards-john@sc.edu