Does Listing's Law hold for other types of eye movements?

1) Vestibular ocular reflex
Function: to keep the image of the world stationary on the retina when the head rotates. Try shaking your head while reading this sentence. The fact that you can do this means that your VOR is working, it is keeping your eye still in space.
It does this by rotating the eyes in the opposite direction of the head. If the head tilts to the side (torsionally) the eye counter-rolls, i.e. it moves out of Listing's plane. Thus the VOR does not obey Listing's law.

2) Pursuit
Function: to keep the fovea on a small moving target, e.g. tracking a tennis ball.
As in saccades, pointing the fovea at this moving ball is a 2D problem and Listing's law used to resolve which of many eye position to choose.
3) Vergence
Function: to align a near target on the fovea of each eye.
Listing's law is violated during vergence between targets at different distances.
Listing's law holds at a constant distance.

Copywrite © 1996 Tutis Vilis and Douglas Tweed
Department of Physiology
University of Western Ontario
London Ontario Canada
Updated October 16, 1996

Comments welcome. Email to tvilis@physiology.uwo.ca