Adaptive Control Model for
the Human Eye Movement System
Terry Bahill
Systems and Industrial Engineering
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721-0020
terry@sie.arizona.edu
© 1998-2004 Bahill
Open loop experiments were used to develop a linear model for
a physiological system. The specific system studied was the eye
movement system: however, the technique presented should generalize
to other physical systems. Human smooth pursuit eye movements
were measured in response to sinusoidal, step, ramp, and step-ramp
target motions in the normal closed-loop condition and in the
open-loop condition. The human responses were compared to the
outputs of four models; the best match was provided by the K/(#tau#s
+ 1) model. Simulation results suggested that in the open-loop
condition, the human often changed control strategy, for example
by turning off the saccadic system and making no position correcting
saccades, in spite of large positional errors.
In order to overcome a time delay and track with zero latency,
like the human, our model for the human smooth pursuit eye movement
system had to predict target velocity and compensate for system
dynamics. The model accomplished this using a least mean squares
prediction algorithm. To help validate the model, a sensitivity
analysis and parameter estimation study were performed.
References [30, 31, 36, and 37]. This lecture on modeling is suitable
for biomedical, systems and control engineers. It requires an
overhead projector and a 35 mm slide projector. This lecture takes
one and a half hours.