There are few studies on the development of oculomotor
functions during childhood. B. Fischer, M. Biscaldi, and
S. Gezeck (1997) reported improvement of antisaccade task
performance between ages 6 and 16 years. The present study
is a replication and extension of those results. In three
age groups (6–7, 10–11, 18–26 years),
saccades during pro- and antisaccade tasks with 200-ms
gap and overlap and during a fixation task were measured.
Adults exhibited faster saccades and less prosaccades during
the antisaccade tasks than 10–11-year-old children;
these two groups had faster saccades during all tasks and
less prosaccades during the anti- and the fixation task
than 6–7-year-old subjects. Both children groups
made more express saccades than adults. Results suggest
different degrees of age-related improvement for different
saccadic parameters, the effects being greatest for prosaccade
inhibition during the antisaccade task and in line with
the assumed protracted development of prefrontal functions.