Masaki Maruyama, Peter Bc Fenwick, Andreas A Ioannides
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Quantitative measures of yoking were provided by mutual information analysis of eye position or velocity, which is sensitive to both linear and non-linear relationships between the eyes' movements. Our mutual information analysis relied on the variance of the eyes movements in each experimental condition. The range of movements for each eye varies for different conditions so yoking was further studied by comparing GO-Only vs. Go/NoGo sessions, leftward vs. rightward saccades.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Mutual information analysis showed that velocity yoking preceded positional yoking. Cognitive load increased trial variances of velocity with no increase in velocity yoking, suggesting that cognitive load may alter neural processes in areas to which oculomotor control is not tightly linked. The comparison between experimental conditions showed that interocular linkage in velocity variance of the right eye lagged that of the left eye during saccades.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>We conclude quantitative measure of interocular yoking based on trial-to-trial variance within a condition, as well as variance between conditions, provides a powerful tool for studying the binocular movement mechanism.</p>","PeriodicalId":87480,"journal":{"name":"Nonlinear biomedical physics","volume":"4 Suppl 1 ","pages":"S10"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-06-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1186/1753-4631-4-S1-S10","citationCount":"4","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Interocular yoking in human saccades examined by mutual information analysis.\",\"authors\":\"Masaki Maruyama, Peter Bc Fenwick, Andreas A Ioannides\",\"doi\":\"10.1186/1753-4631-4-S1-S10\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Saccadic eye movements align the two eyes precisely to foveate a target. Trial-by-trial variance of eye movement is always observed within an identical experimental condition. This has often been treated as experimental error without addressing its significance. The present study examined statistical linkages between the two eyes' movements, namely interocular yoking, for the variance of eye position and velocity.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Horizontal saccadic movements were recorded from twelve right-eye-dominant subjects while they decided on saccade direction in Go-Only sessions and on both saccade execution and direction in Go/NoGo sessions. We used infrared corneal reflection to record simultaneously and independently the movement of each eye. Quantitative measures of yoking were provided by mutual information analysis of eye position or velocity, which is sensitive to both linear and non-linear relationships between the eyes' movements. Our mutual information analysis relied on the variance of the eyes movements in each experimental condition. The range of movements for each eye varies for different conditions so yoking was further studied by comparing GO-Only vs. Go/NoGo sessions, leftward vs. rightward saccades.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Mutual information analysis showed that velocity yoking preceded positional yoking. Cognitive load increased trial variances of velocity with no increase in velocity yoking, suggesting that cognitive load may alter neural processes in areas to which oculomotor control is not tightly linked. 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引用次数: 4
摘要
背景:跳眼运动使两只眼睛精确地对齐以注视目标。每次试验的眼动差异总是在相同的实验条件下观察到的。这通常被视为实验错误,而不考虑其重要性。本研究考察了两眼运动之间的统计联系,即眼间对视,因为眼睛位置和速度的变化。方法:记录12名右眼优势被试在“只动”组和“动/不动”组决定扫视方向和扫视执行方向时的水平扫视运动。我们使用角膜红外反射来同时独立地记录每只眼睛的运动。通过对眼球位置或速度的互信息分析,对眼球运动之间的线性和非线性关系都很敏感,从而提供了对视的定量测量。我们的互信息分析依赖于每个实验条件下眼球运动的差异。在不同的情况下,每只眼睛的运动范围是不同的,因此,通过比较Go - only与Go/ no - Go会话、向左扫视与向右扫视,我们进一步研究了眼动。结果:互信息分析显示速度联动先于位置联动。认知负荷增加了速度的试验方差,但没有增加速度偏移,这表明认知负荷可能改变与动眼肌控制没有紧密联系的区域的神经过程。实验条件的比较表明,在扫视过程中,右眼速度变化的眼间联动滞后于左眼。结论:基于同一条件下试验间方差和不同条件下试验间方差的眼间偏斜定量测量为研究双眼运动机制提供了有力的工具。
Interocular yoking in human saccades examined by mutual information analysis.
Background: Saccadic eye movements align the two eyes precisely to foveate a target. Trial-by-trial variance of eye movement is always observed within an identical experimental condition. This has often been treated as experimental error without addressing its significance. The present study examined statistical linkages between the two eyes' movements, namely interocular yoking, for the variance of eye position and velocity.
Methods: Horizontal saccadic movements were recorded from twelve right-eye-dominant subjects while they decided on saccade direction in Go-Only sessions and on both saccade execution and direction in Go/NoGo sessions. We used infrared corneal reflection to record simultaneously and independently the movement of each eye. Quantitative measures of yoking were provided by mutual information analysis of eye position or velocity, which is sensitive to both linear and non-linear relationships between the eyes' movements. Our mutual information analysis relied on the variance of the eyes movements in each experimental condition. The range of movements for each eye varies for different conditions so yoking was further studied by comparing GO-Only vs. Go/NoGo sessions, leftward vs. rightward saccades.
Results: Mutual information analysis showed that velocity yoking preceded positional yoking. Cognitive load increased trial variances of velocity with no increase in velocity yoking, suggesting that cognitive load may alter neural processes in areas to which oculomotor control is not tightly linked. The comparison between experimental conditions showed that interocular linkage in velocity variance of the right eye lagged that of the left eye during saccades.
Conclusions: We conclude quantitative measure of interocular yoking based on trial-to-trial variance within a condition, as well as variance between conditions, provides a powerful tool for studying the binocular movement mechanism.