SPIC allows acquisition, analysis, display and printing of saccadic latency data. NB That the acquisition part requires specific hardware (The ViSaGe system from Cambridge Research Systems). Other methods of data input are under development, but OBE files may be imported via LatencyMeter from an Ober Saccadometer. In the most recent version of SPIC this process can be highly automated: hundreds of OBE files can be analysed sequentially, creating and storing the derived reciprobit plots and copying the numerical results to the Log, from which they can be copied to a spreadsheet. This means that LMSPIC is no longer needed. If you have been using LMSPIC, you should switch to SPIC itself.
Click here to download and install classic SPIC (15.iv.2010). New features include more kinds of complex stimuli, simplified SAS files, improved automation of batch processing, faster simulation fitting, and the ability to read OBE files generated by LatencyMeter version 4.7 and later.
Click here to download and install the new, somewhat beta, version of SPIC (5.vii.2010): for the moment it is called NewSpic. Its additional features include simulation fits of two distributions at once, export of the log in Excel format, extended duration of experimental trials, a further extension of the list of stimulus items, and fitting of both express and inattention saccades. It also allows real-time recording using a saccadometer rather than an oculometer, via USB, but this feature has not yet been fully tested. In every other respect this version appears to be entirely stable.
Click here to download and install LatencyMeter and its drivers, and here for information about saccadometers.
Click here for tutorial information and a short bibliography concerning the LATER model.
I will be happy to help with any problems you may encounter.