Aging and eye tracking: in the quest for objective biomarkers

Ramtin Z Marandi, Parisa Gazerani

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReview (oversigtsartikel)peer review

23 Citationer (Scopus)
159 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Recent applications of eye tracking for diagnosis, prognosis and follow-up of therapy in age-related neurological or psychological deficits have been reviewed. The review is focused on active aging, neurodegeneration and cognitive impairments. The potential impacts and current limitations of using characterizing features of eye movements and pupillary responses (oculometrics) as objective biomarkers in the context of aging are discussed. A closer look into the findings, especially with respect to cognitive impairments, suggests that eye tracking is an invaluable technique to study hidden aspects of aging that have not been revealed using any other noninvasive tool. Future research should involve a wider variety of oculometrics, in addition to saccadic metrics and pupillary responses, including nonlinear and combinatorial features as well as blink- and fixation-related metrics to develop biomarkers to trace age-related irregularities associated with cognitive and neural deficits.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
ArtikelnummerFNL33
TidsskriftFuture Neurology
Vol/bind14
Udgave nummer4
ISSN1479-6708
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2019

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