Search results for "Eye Movements"

showing 10 items of 95 documents

Comparison of cyclodeviation and duction measurement in Graves' orbitopathy patients using different devices

2011

To compare measurement outcomes of different devices measuring cyclodeviation and ductions in Graves' orbitopathy (GO) patients. Cyclodeviation in GO patients was measured using the Harms tangent screen (HTS), the cycloforometer of Franceschetti, and the synoptometer. Ductions were measured using the modified perimeter, the Goldmann perimeter and the Maddox tangent scale (MTS). In 13 patients, cyclodeviation in primary position, up-, and downgaze was measured with the above-mentioned devices. The mean differences ranged from 0.3º to 3.1º and were smallest between the HTS and the cycloforometer (89% of all measurements within 2º difference). Measurement of abduction, adduction, elevation, an…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyEye Movementsbusiness.industryEquipment DesignPrimary positionDiagnostic Techniques OphthalmologicalMiddle AgedTangent screenGraves DiseasePerimeterOphthalmologyOphthalmologymedicineHumansVisual Field TestsGoldmann perimeterFemalebusinessAgedStrabismus
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Abduction nystagmus in internuclear ophthalmoplegia

1992

Direct current electro-oculography revealed abduction nystagmus with hypermetric abduction saccades in 35 of 64 patients with unilateral and 55 of 66 patients with bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia. Slowing of abduction saccades occurred in 27 unilateral cases, mainly ipsilateral to the paretic eye, and in 36 bilateral cases. Abduction nystagmus with hypermetric abduction saccades of normal velocity is explained by an increased phasic innervation adjusted to adduction paresis. Slowed abduction saccades are attributed to impaired inhibition of the medial rectus muscle. Superposition of impaired medial rectus inhibition and increased phasic innervation best explains abduction nystagmus w…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyMultiple SclerosisEye Movementsgenetic structuresElectrodiagnosisEye diseaseInternuclear ophthalmoplegiaNystagmusNystagmus PathologicPhysical medicine and rehabilitationPonsNeural PathwaysReaction TimeSaccadesmedicineHumansDominance CerebralNormal velocityParesisOphthalmoplegiamedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryReticular FormationMedial rectus muscleCerebral InfarctionGeneral MedicineElectrooculographyAnatomyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesbody regionsElectrooculographyNeurologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessActa Neurologica Scandinavica
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Subjective fixation disparity affected by dynamic asymmetry, resting vergence, and nonius bias.

2011

PURPOSE This study was undertaken to investigate how subjectively measured fixation disparity can be explained by (1) the convergent-divergent asymmetry of vergence dynamics (called dynamic asymmetry) for a disparity vergence step stimulus of 1° (60 arc min), (2) the dark vergence, and (3) the nonius bias. METHODS Fixation disparity, dark vergence, and nonius bias were measured subjectively using nonius lines. Dynamic vergence step responses (both convergent and divergent) were measured objectively. RESULTS In 20 subjects (mean age, 24.5 ± 4.3 years, visual acuity, ≥1.0; all emmetropic except for one with myopia, wearing contact lenses), multiple regression analyses showed that 39% of the v…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyVisual acuityVision Disparitygenetic structuresAdolescentEye Movementsmedia_common.quotation_subjectRestVisual AcuityEmmetropiaAudiologyAsymmetrylaw.inventionFeedbackYoung Adultlawparasitic diseasesmedicineHumansmedia_commonVision BinocularVision TestsVision DisparityMean ageNoniusConvergent and divergent productionFemalemedicine.symptomFixation disparityPsychologyInvestigative ophthalmologyvisual science
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Temporal Structure of Human Gaze Dynamics Is Invariant During Free Viewing.

2015

We investigate the dynamic structure of human gaze and present an experimental study of the frequency components of the change in gaze position over time during free viewing of computer-generated fractal images. We show that changes in gaze position are scale-invariant in time with statistical properties that are characteristic of a random walk process. We quantify and track changes in the temporal structure using a well-defined scaling parameter called the Hurst exponent, H. We find H is robust regardless of the spatial complexity generated by the fractal images. In addition, we find the Hurst exponent is invariant across all participants, including those with distinct changes to higher or…

AdultVisual acuityAdolescentEye MovementsComputer scienceInformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.HCI)ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONVisual Acuitylcsh:MedicineNeural degenerationTemporal lobeOcular Motility DisordersYoung AdultFractalInformationSystems_MODELSANDPRINCIPLESOcular Motility DisordersMuscle Stretching ExercisesmedicineHumansComputer visionInvariant (mathematics)lcsh:ScienceHurst exponentMultidisciplinarybusiness.industrylcsh:REye movementComputational BiologyRandom walkGazeTemporal LobeFractalsHuman visual system modelNerve Degenerationlcsh:QArtificial intelligencemedicine.symptombusinessResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Eye position tunes the contribution of allocentric and egocentric information to target localization in human goal-directed arm movements.

1997

Subjects were required to point to the distant vertex of the closed and the open configurations of the Muller-Lyer illusion using either their right hand (experiment 1) or their left hand (experiment 2). In both experiments the Muller-Lyer figures were horizontally presented either in the left or in the right hemispace and movements were executed using either foveal or peripheral vision of the target. According to the illusion effect, subjects undershot and overshot the vertex location of the closed and the open configuration, respectively. The illusion effect decreased when the target was fixated and when the stimulus was positioned in the right hemispace. These results confirm the hypothe…

Adultright cerebral hemisphereEye Movementsmedia_common.quotation_subjectArm; psychomotor performance; illusions; dominance cerebral; video recording; eye movements; adult; humansIllusionVideo RecordingPoison controlStimulus (physiology)dominanceSettore BIO/09FovealPerceptionHumansComputer visioneye positionDominance Cerebralpointing kinematicsmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMüller-Lyer illusionBody movementIllusionsPeripheral visionArmcerebralegocentric and allocentric frame of referenceArtificial intelligenceMuller-Lyer illusionPsychologybusinessPsychomotor PerformanceNeuroscience letters
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Influence of proprioceptive information on space orientation on the ground and in orbital weightlessness

1989

Conscious space orientation depends on afferent information from different sense organs including the labyrinth, the eyes, tactile cues from the skin, joint receptors, muscle spindles, tendon organs and possibly viscera. An important role is played by impulses from the cervical position receptors in interaction with concomitant information from the otolith system. In order to isolate the effect of cervical position receptors from that of the otolith system, space experiments in orbital weightlessness and in parabolic aircraft flight were performed. It was found that stimulation of the neck receptors in weightlessness markedly influences the perception of the subjective vertical and horizont…

Atmospheric ScienceEye Movementsgenetic structuresMovementAerospace EngineeringStimulationOtolithic membraneOtolithic MembraneOrientationmedicineHumansSensory cueOtolithPhysicsProprioceptionWeightlessnessWeightlessnessTorsion (gastropod)Eye movementAstronomy and AstrophysicsAnatomySpace FlightProprioceptionAdaptation Physiologicalbody regionsGeophysicsmedicine.anatomical_structureSpace and Planetary ScienceGeneral Earth and Planetary Sciencessense organsHeadAdvances in Space Research
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Cerebellar learning of bio-mechanical functions of extra-ocular muscles: modeling by artificial neural networks

2003

A control circuit is proposed to model the command of saccadic eye movements. Its wiring is deduced from a mathematical constraint, i.e. the necessity, for motor orders processing, to compute an approximate inverse function of the bio-mechanical function of the moving plant, here the bio-mechanics of the eye. This wiring is comparable to the anatomy of the cerebellar pathways. A predicting element, necessary for inversion and thus for movement accuracy, is modeled by an artificial neural network whose structure, deduced from physical constraints expressing the mechanics of the eye, is similar to the cell connectivity of the cerebellar cortex. Its functioning is set by supervised reinforceme…

CerebellumEye MovementsArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMotor controlEye movementPattern recognitionSaccadic maskingBiomechanical Phenomenamedicine.anatomical_structureOculomotor MusclesCerebellumCerebellar cortexMotor systemmedicineLearningReinforcement learningNeural Networks ComputerArtificial intelligencebusinessNeuroscienceMathematicsNeuroscience
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Transition from self tilt to object tilt during maintained lateral tilt in parabolic flight.

1991

Abstract 19 young healthy subjects were subjected to parabolic rollercoaster flight. A horizontal luminous line was seen by the subjects in a headfixed goggle device. During the hypergravic phases of parabolic flight the luminous line seemed to rotate into and during the hypogravic phase against the direction of static head tilt. Ocular counter rotation and activity of the neck position receptors cannot explain these subjective rotations. We conclude that information from the otolith system, converging with visual information within the brain, dislocated the headfixed visual target line. While the retinal image of the luminous line remains unchanged, loading and unloading the otoliths in pa…

Counter rotationgenetic structuresEye MovementsRotationHead tiltParabolic flightPhase (waves)Aerospace EngineeringHypergravityOtolithic MembraneOpticsHumansPhysicsbusiness.industryWeightlessnessHealthy subjectsSpace FlightVestibular Function TestsProprioceptionRetinal imageTilt (optics)Head MovementsLine (geometry)Visual Perceptionsense organsbusinessActa astronautica
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Attentional processing biases to threat in schizophrenia: Evidence from a free-viewing task with emotional scenes

2021

Attentional biases to threatening stimuli have been suggested to play a key role in the onset and course of schizophrenia. However, current research has not completely demonstrated this assumption. The aim of this eye-tracking study was to shed light on the underlying psychological mechanisms of schizophrenia by examining the attentional processing of socio-emotional information. Forty-four individuals with schizophrenia and 47 healthy controls were assessed in a 3-s free-viewing task with a social scene (i.e., happy, threatening, or neutral) in competition with a non-social one to determine the effects of emotional information on the different stages of the attentional processing. The loca…

Eye MovementsSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)EmotionsVulnerabilityEye movementAttentional biasGazeAttention Emotion Eye movements Eye tracking PsychopathologyAttentional BiasPsychiatry and Mental healthBiasSchizophreniaHumansEye trackingMechanisms of schizophreniaPsychologyBiological PsychiatryCognitive psychologyPsychopathologyJournal of Psychiatric Research
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Viewing patterns regarding panoramic radiographs with different pathological lesions: an eye-tracking study.

2021

Objective: The aim of this study was to examine how dental students vary their viewing patterns of panoramic radiographs during different levels of dental education. Methods: Two groups of students (total number = 48, n = 24) in different grades (second and fifth clinical semester) were compared. The second clinical semester participated twice, as during the second clinical semester a specific lecture on dental radiology and diagnosis is held. The first viewing took place at the beginning of the semester (2a), the second at the end of it (2e). The fifth semester (5e) represents students shortly before graduation. While viewing 20 panoramic radiographs showing specific pathologies, the eye m…

Eye Movementsbusiness.industryRadiography610 MedizinEye movement610 Medicine & healthGeneral MedicineDental educationOtorhinolaryngology610 Medical sciencesRadiography PanoramicHumansOptometryMedicineEye trackingRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingEye-Tracking Technologybusiness610 Medicine & healthGeneral DentistryPathological
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