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Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old

Eye movements measured by high precision eye-tracking technology represent a sensitive, objective, and non-invasive method to probe functional neural pathways. Oculomotor tests (e.g., saccades and smooth pursuit), tests that involve cognitive processing (e.g., antisaccade and predictive saccade), an...

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Autores principales: Kullmann, Aura, Ashmore, Robin C., Braverman, Alexandr, Mazur, Christian, Snapp, Hillary, Williams, Erin, Szczupak, Mikhaylo, Murphy, Sara, Marshall, Kathryn, Crawford, James, Balaban, Carey D., Hoffer, Michael, Kiderman, Alexander
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8608311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34807938
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260351
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author Kullmann, Aura
Ashmore, Robin C.
Braverman, Alexandr
Mazur, Christian
Snapp, Hillary
Williams, Erin
Szczupak, Mikhaylo
Murphy, Sara
Marshall, Kathryn
Crawford, James
Balaban, Carey D.
Hoffer, Michael
Kiderman, Alexander
author_facet Kullmann, Aura
Ashmore, Robin C.
Braverman, Alexandr
Mazur, Christian
Snapp, Hillary
Williams, Erin
Szczupak, Mikhaylo
Murphy, Sara
Marshall, Kathryn
Crawford, James
Balaban, Carey D.
Hoffer, Michael
Kiderman, Alexander
author_sort Kullmann, Aura
collection PubMed
description Eye movements measured by high precision eye-tracking technology represent a sensitive, objective, and non-invasive method to probe functional neural pathways. Oculomotor tests (e.g., saccades and smooth pursuit), tests that involve cognitive processing (e.g., antisaccade and predictive saccade), and reaction time tests have increasingly been showing utility in the diagnosis and monitoring of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in research settings. Currently, the adoption of these tests into clinical practice is hampered by a lack of a normative data set. The goal of this study was to construct a normative database to be used as a reference for comparing patients’ results. Oculomotor, cognitive, and reaction time tests were administered to male and female volunteers, aged 18–45, who were free of any neurological, vestibular disorders, or other head injuries. Tests were delivered using either a rotatory chair equipped with video-oculography goggles (VOG) or a portable virtual reality-like VOG goggle device with incorporated infrared eye-tracking technology. Statistical analysis revealed no effects of age on test metrics when participant data were divided into pediatric (i.e.,18–21 years, following FDA criteria) and adult (i.e., 21–45 years) groups. Gender (self-reported) had an effect on auditory reaction time, with males being faster than females. Pooled data were used to construct a normative database using 95% reference intervals (RI) with 90% confidence intervals on the upper and lower limits of the RI. The availability of these RIs readily allows clinicians to identify specific metrics that are deficient, therefore aiding in rapid triage, informing and monitoring treatment and/or rehabilitation protocols, and aiding in the return to duty/activity decision. This database is FDA cleared for use in clinical practice (K192186).
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spelling pubmed-86083112021-11-23 Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old Kullmann, Aura Ashmore, Robin C. Braverman, Alexandr Mazur, Christian Snapp, Hillary Williams, Erin Szczupak, Mikhaylo Murphy, Sara Marshall, Kathryn Crawford, James Balaban, Carey D. Hoffer, Michael Kiderman, Alexander PLoS One Research Article Eye movements measured by high precision eye-tracking technology represent a sensitive, objective, and non-invasive method to probe functional neural pathways. Oculomotor tests (e.g., saccades and smooth pursuit), tests that involve cognitive processing (e.g., antisaccade and predictive saccade), and reaction time tests have increasingly been showing utility in the diagnosis and monitoring of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in research settings. Currently, the adoption of these tests into clinical practice is hampered by a lack of a normative data set. The goal of this study was to construct a normative database to be used as a reference for comparing patients’ results. Oculomotor, cognitive, and reaction time tests were administered to male and female volunteers, aged 18–45, who were free of any neurological, vestibular disorders, or other head injuries. Tests were delivered using either a rotatory chair equipped with video-oculography goggles (VOG) or a portable virtual reality-like VOG goggle device with incorporated infrared eye-tracking technology. Statistical analysis revealed no effects of age on test metrics when participant data were divided into pediatric (i.e.,18–21 years, following FDA criteria) and adult (i.e., 21–45 years) groups. Gender (self-reported) had an effect on auditory reaction time, with males being faster than females. Pooled data were used to construct a normative database using 95% reference intervals (RI) with 90% confidence intervals on the upper and lower limits of the RI. The availability of these RIs readily allows clinicians to identify specific metrics that are deficient, therefore aiding in rapid triage, informing and monitoring treatment and/or rehabilitation protocols, and aiding in the return to duty/activity decision. This database is FDA cleared for use in clinical practice (K192186). Public Library of Science 2021-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8608311/ /pubmed/34807938 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260351 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kullmann, Aura
Ashmore, Robin C.
Braverman, Alexandr
Mazur, Christian
Snapp, Hillary
Williams, Erin
Szczupak, Mikhaylo
Murphy, Sara
Marshall, Kathryn
Crawford, James
Balaban, Carey D.
Hoffer, Michael
Kiderman, Alexander
Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old
title Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old
title_full Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old
title_fullStr Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old
title_full_unstemmed Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old
title_short Portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: Normative data for 18–45 year old
title_sort portable eye-tracking as a reliable assessment of oculomotor, cognitive and reaction time function: normative data for 18–45 year old
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8608311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34807938
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260351
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