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. 2020 Jul 8;53(1):167–187. doi: 10.3758/s13428-020-01388-2

Table 3.

Statistical assessment of sampling frequency

SAMPLING FREQUENCY [Hz]
250 125 83.3 62.5 50 41.7 35.7 31.3
AMPLITUDE num p 1.000 0.966 0.681 0.859 0.977 0.435 0.114 0.067
R2 1.000 0.998 0.997 0.997 0.995 0.994 0.992 0.989
fit p 1.000 0.991 0.987 0.966 0.958 0.959 0.948 0.878
R2 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 0.999 0.999
DURATION num p 1.000 0.507 0.126 0.001 1e-06 1e-10 1e-15 1e-18
R2 1.000 0.847 0.802 0.772 0.761 0.675 0.661 0.462
fit p 1.000 0.979 0.957 0.963 0.955 0.173 0.260 0.004
R2 1.000 0.993 0.979 0.956 0.902 0.839 0.887 0.543
PEAK VEL. num p 1.000 0.004 0.001 1e-06 1e-08 1e-11 1e-14 1e-15
R2 1.000 0.932 0.924 0.910 0.902 0.906 0.893 0.892
fit p 1.000 0.981 0.987 0.951 0.963 0.803 0.557 0.034
R2 1.000 0.997 0.994 0.981 0.930 0.197 0.938 0.864

The Table shows the results of a statistical test to assess the robustness of the measurements of saccadic parameters (amplitude, duration and peak velocity) at decreasing sampling frequency of the eye position data, from 250 Hz (original), down to 31.3 Hz. The used eye movement data are those from Experiment 2. For each parameter, the table reports the p value of a two-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum test, against the null hypothesis that parameters measured on the original and subsampled traces come from a distribution with the same median. Statistically significant values are highlighted in bold characters. The table also reports the coefficient of determination R2, computed between the parameters measured on the original sampling frequency and those measured on the subsampled traces