“…Cortical representation of peripheral information is compressed farther, giving more weight to central vision ( Schira et al., 2007 , 2010) . As a result, peripheral vision is not precise but accounts for a much bigger surface on the retina compared to central vision; as such, it is geared toward building a quick but coarse global representation of the environment ( Larson et al., 2009 ; Loschky et al., 2019 ; Trouilloud et al., 2020) . It is sufficient to reliably achieve visual processing tasks such as object and scene perception ( Boucart et al., 2013 , 2016 ; Thibaut et al., 2016 ; Loschky et al., 2019) , color perception ( Na et al., 2006 ; Hansen et al., 2009) , or action recognition ( Fademrecht et al., 2016) at high retinal eccentricities (50 to 70 degrees).…”