“…Several previous studies have shown that amblyopia may affect smooth pursuit, fixational eye movements, or fixation stability (Ciuffreda, Kenyon, & Stark, 1979;Gonzalez, Wong, Niechwiej-Szwedo, Tarita-Nistor, & Steinbach, 2012;Subramanian et al, 2013;Chung, Kumar, Li, R. & Levi, 2015;Ghasia, 2015;Shaikh, Otero-Millan, Kumar, & Ghasia, 2016;Kelly, Cheng-Patel, Jost, Wang, & Birch, 2018). In terms of saccadic eye movements, reduced precision of saccade amplitude or increased saccadic reaction time (latency) may be present in amblyopic subjects (Niechwiej-Szwedo, Chandrakumar, Goltz, & Wong, 2012;Perdziak, Witkowska, Gryncewicz, Przekoracka-Krawczyk, & Ober, 2014;McKee, Levi, Schor, & Movshon, 2016;Perdziak, Witkowska, Gryncewicz, & Ober, 2016). However, in the vast majority of previous research, saccadic latency in amblyopic subjects was measured during the classic paradigm in which the peripheral target is switched on simultaneously with an offset of fixation target-there is no gap condition.…”