Oculomotor responses of patients with amblyopia during naturalistic tasksAmblyopia is a unilateral or, less frequently, bilateral loss of vision resulting from abnormal visual stimulation during the early years of visual development. In clinics, the diagnosis of amblyopia largely relies on a decreased monocular visual acuity, the absence of any pathological that would explain the visual deficit, and the presence of an amblyogenic factor (usually strabismus or anisometropia). However, several other visuospatial functions such as contrast sensitivity, stereopsis or visual processing are also affected in amblyopia. Several studies have also reported oculomotor deficits in the amblyopic and fellow (dominant) eyes, such as longer saccadic latencies and reduced saccadic amplitudes, low pursuit gain, or fixation instability. Usually, these studies are done in very controlled laboratory conditions, presenting visual stimuli on a computer screen and recording eye movements with an eye-tracker. Although these findings are relevant in the context of basic research on the neural mechanisms of amblyopia, the consequences of these oculomotor deficits in daily life are still undetermined. In this work, eye movements of children with amblyopia will be recorded with a portable eye-tracker while they do naturalistic tasks which require a combination of visuospatial abilities. Their oculomotor behavior will be compared to that of typically developing children to determine how amblyopia affects the performance in daily life activities. This work is part of a bigger project that the research group VISPEC (Visual Optics and Spectral Imaging Group) from the CD6 (Centre for Sensors, Instruments and Systems Development) is carrying out at the moment.https://muei.etseib.masters.upc.edu/151/euoot/ca/curs-actual/treball-final-estudis/ofertes-tfe/oculomotor-responses-of-patients-with-amblyopia-during-naturalistic-taskshttps://muei.etseib.masters.upc.edu/151/euoot/++resource++plone-logo.svg
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Oculomotor responses of patients with amblyopia during naturalistic tasks
Amblyopia is a unilateral or, less frequently, bilateral loss of vision resulting from abnormal visual stimulation during the early years of visual development. In clinics, the diagnosis of amblyopia largely relies on a decreased monocular visual acuity, the absence of any pathological that would explain the visual deficit, and the presence of an amblyogenic factor (usually strabismus or anisometropia). However, several other visuospatial functions such as contrast sensitivity, stereopsis or visual processing are also affected in amblyopia. Several studies have also reported oculomotor deficits in the amblyopic and fellow (dominant) eyes, such as longer saccadic latencies and reduced saccadic amplitudes, low pursuit gain, or fixation instability. Usually, these studies are done in very controlled laboratory conditions, presenting visual stimuli on a computer screen and recording eye movements with an eye-tracker. Although these findings are relevant in the context of basic research on the neural mechanisms of amblyopia, the consequences of these oculomotor deficits in daily life are still undetermined. In this work, eye movements of children with amblyopia will be recorded with a portable eye-tracker while they do naturalistic tasks which require a combination of visuospatial abilities. Their oculomotor behavior will be compared to that of typically developing children to determine how amblyopia affects the performance in daily life activities. This work is part of a bigger project that the research group VISPEC (Visual Optics and Spectral Imaging Group) from the CD6 (Centre for Sensors, Instruments and Systems Development) is carrying out at the moment.
Objectius
To determine whether patients with amblyopia exhibit a different oculomotor behavior that impacts their performance on naturalistic daily life activities compared to typically developing children.
Tasques a realitzar / Característiques
Participate in the data collection process and recording of eye movements with an eye-tracker in patients with amblyopia and control participants. Perform data analyses to determine possible differences in oculomotor behavior between groups.
Tema
Tipus
Estudi
TFG/TFM
TFG
Titulació
2020 - GRAU EN ÒPTICA I OPTOMETRIA
Paraules clau
Direction
Professor/a
clara.mestre
Nom del professor/a
Mestre Ferrer, Clara
Email del professor/a
clara.mestre@upc.edu
Departament
731-Q031
Tipus de codirector/a
UPC
Codirector/a
maite.valentino
Nom del codirector/a
Valentino Herrera, Maria teresa
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