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Eye Movements, Eye Blinks, and Behavior Nicole Tindall

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Eye Movements, Eye Blinks, and Behavior Nicole Tindall, Kylie Gray, and Sarah Leis Part I: Eye Movements and the EOG Nicole Tindall The Control of Eye Movements Eye ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eye Movements, Eye Blinks, and Behavior Nicole Tindall


1
Eye Movements, Eye Blinks, and Behavior
  • Nicole Tindall, Kylie Gray,
  • and Sarah Leis

2
Part I Eye Movements and the EOG
  • Nicole Tindall

3
The Control of Eye Movements
  • Eye movements are used to fixate objects so that
    they fall on the fovea of the eye
  • Occipital and frontal cortices are involved in
    eye fixation
  • The eye muscles are innervated by the 3rd
    (oculomotor), 4th (trochlear), and 6th (abducens)
    cranial nerves
  • Three sets of muscles are used to move the eyes
  • Superior and inferior rectus
  • Lateral and medial rectus
  • Superior and inferior obliques

4
Voluntary vs. Involuntary Eye Fixations
  • Voluntary Fixations when the eye focuses on an
    object of choice
  • Example reading
  • Controlled by the prefrontal cortex
  • Involuntary Fixations constantly occuring
  • Controlled by the occipital cortex

5
Types of Eye Movements
  • Saccadic- movements from one fixation point to
    the next
  • Saccade variables
  • Saccade latency- time between presentation of
    stimulus and fixation
  • Saccade amplitude- distance covered by eye during
    saccade
  • Direction of movement- whether it is horizontal
    or vertical movement
  • Velocity- speed of the saccade
  • Fixation pause time- occurs between fixations

6
Types of Eye Movements (Contd)
  • Smooth Pursuit- movement the eyes make when
    following a moving object
  • Example following a bird in the sky
  • Smooth Compensatory- this movement corrects for
    differences in head tilt so that the image
    remains upright

7
Types of Eye Movements (Contd)
  • Nystagmoid- abnormal oscillations of the eye
  • Causes
  • Eye defects
  • Impairment of vestibular (balance) system
  • Impairment of visual or vestibular pathways in
    the CNS
  • Rapid Eye Movements (REM)
  • Occur during sleep
  • Last anywhere from a few minutes to more than a
    half-hour
  • Eye Blinks (3 types)

8
3 Types of Eye Blinks
  • Voluntary blink consciously close the eyes
  • Blink Reflex when the eyes blink to act as a
    defense mechanism in response to a potentially
    harmful stimulus
  • Keeps the cornea healthy by keeping the surface
    moist
  • Occurs about 15,000 times/day (about 15-20
    times/min in relaxed state)

9
Recording Eye Movements/Blinks
  • Four methods
  • Contact-lens method
  • Corneal reflection method
  • Television camera scanning
  • Electrooculogram (EOG)

10
Electrooculogram (EOG)
  • Records the movements (and direction) of the eyes
    by electrodes placed over the muscles that move
    the eye
  • Can have binocular or monocular set-up (binocular
    more reliable)
  • Head must be kept still so the center of the
    visual field is constant
  • Ideal impedance of the electrodes is under 2,000
    ohms (we have been dealing with impedances under
    50 Kohms)

11
The EOG Can Record
  • Saccadic movements
  • Smooth pursuit movements
  • Nystagmus
  • Convergence and divergence of the eye
  • REM during sleep

12
EOG Complications
  • 3 problems to be cautious of
  • Small magnitude of EOG signal
  • Skin potential that are the same frequency as the
    EOG signal
  • Slow drift- steady deflection of recording in one
    direction
  • Caused by unclean electrodes and poor contact
    with the skin

13
Binocular Electrode Placement
  • Electrodes A B are used to measure horizontal
    eye movements
  • Electrodes C D measure vertical eye movements
  • Electrode E is the ground

14
EOG Recording
  • Channel 1 one second timer Channel 2
    horizontal unipolar reading Channel 3
    horizontal bipolar reading Channel 4 marking
    channel with artifact noise

15
Part II Eye Movements and Behavior
  • Kylie Gray

16
Mental Activity and Eye Movements
  • Primary Function of Eye Movements
  • Allow change in eye position to focus on objects
    of interest
  • Two different kinds of eye movement
  • 1. Saccadic
  • 2. Pursuit
  • Video

17
Eye Movements and Learning
  • Paired Associates Learning
  • (Haltrecht McCormack, 1966)
  • 1. Subject sees word pairs, one word at a time
  • 2. Subject then sees stimulus words
  • 3. Asked to recall second word of word pairs as
    stimulus words presented (response words)
  • Hypothesized that subjects consolidated during
    initial phase (response-learning) then made
    connection in a second phase (hook-up)
  • (McCormack, Haltrecht, Hannah, 1967)
  • Fixation of response words decreased as learning
    progressed, whereas time spent viewing the
    stimulus words increased
  • Viewing time of response and stimulus words
    diverged more quickly when subjects earned as
    easy list than a difficult one
  • - Eye movement pattern varies with efficiency and
    stage of learning and may differ with difficulty
    of the learning task

18
Eye Movements, Problem Solving, and Laterality
  • Problem Solving
  • ( Nakano, 1971) Subjects presented with 2
    horizontal arrays of pictures under 3 conditions
  • 1. no problem solving required
  • 2. when the pics were used in the solution of
    a problem
  • 3. after problem solving
  • - avg. number of eye fixations was greatest when
    pictures were needed to solve the problem and
    least after problem solving was completed
  • ( Ehrlichman and Barrett, 1983) Saccadic eye
    movement during 2 kinds of cognitive activity
  • Verbal
  • Visual ( did not require viewing stimuli)
  • More eye movements to questions calling for
    verbal processes than visual imagery
  • Reflect differences in internal sampling or
    shifts in cognitive operations

19
  • Hemispheric Dominance
  • Eyes move left or right in a consistent manner
    after asking a question that required some
    thought
  • The eyes move rightward for verbal analytic
    problems and leftward for spatial problems
  • Gur (1975) right-handed males were studied
  • Eye movements left for spatial problems and
    right for verbal when the experimenter sat behind
    them, however, when experimenter sat in front the
    movements moved predominately to one side
    regardless of problem type
  • Left handers were uncorrelated with problem
    type , even when experimenter sat behind
  • Greater degree of lateralization for
    right-handers was found
  • (Neubauer, Schulter, Pfurtscheller, 1988)
    Greater EEG activation in the hemisphere
    contralateral to predominant direction of gaze
    was observed for both left-movers and right-movers

20
Eye Movements and Reading
  • Reading Efficiency
  • Buswell (1920) Eye movement reading patterns of
    students at 13 levels from first grade to college
  • Results of reading skills
  • 1. steady decrease in number of eye fixations
    per line of reading material with higher grade
    levels
  • 2. fixations became shorter in duration
  • 3. number of regressive movements decreased
    from an average of 5.1 per line for first graders
    to .5 for college students
  • More efficient readers made fewer and shorter
    duration eye fixations and had fewer regressive
    movements than inefficient readers

21
Reading Disabilities and Eye Movements
  • Lefton (1978) Studied eye movement patterns of
    fifth-grade children with reading disabilities
    while they did a letter-matching task
  • Results Needed an unusually large number of eye
    fixations to do the task
  • Abnormal eye movement patterns are the result of
    poor reading, and that training in systematic
    gathering of information should help poor readers
  • Pavlidis (1981) Reported differences between
    dyslexics and normal readers eye movements in a
    tracking task
  • Resuts 3 types of hypothesis
  • 1. erratic eye movements reflect problems that
    dyslexics have with the reading material
  • 2. erratic eye movements cause dyslexia
  • 3. erratic eye movements and dyslexia are
    symptoms of independent but parallel brain
    deficits

22
Eye Movements and Psychopathology
  • Schizophrenia
  • Holzman, Proctor, Hughes (1973) difficulty
    following a slowly moving target that is in
    continuous motion
  • Iacono (1988) inability to produce intact
    smooth eye movements
  • Pursuit-tracking deficits are under genetic
    control and that it could possibly be used as a
    marker for individuals who may be predisposed to
    becoming schizophrenic
  • It has been suggested that the deficit has its
    basis in a disorder affecting the frontal eye
    fields leads to inability to inhibit saccades
  • Study done on manic depressives using lithium
    carbonate - didnt worsen pursuit performance,
    which supports the idea that smooth pursuit
    dysfunction is specific to schizophrenia

23
Eye Movements and Perception
  • Gould Schaffer (1967) eye movement recordings
    indicated that sbujects spent more time fixating
    patterns that exactly matched a memorized
    standard than on those that differed, suggesting
    that detailed comparisons of features were being
    made
  • Scan Paths
  • Noton Stark ( 1971) analyzed eye movements of
    subjects while they viewed different patterns in
    a learning phase and recognition phase
  • Analyses of eye movements indicated that subjects
    followed similar paths for a given pattern, and
    the sequence of movements was usually the same in
    the recognition phase as it was in the learning
    phase.
  • Suggests that memory for features of a picture is
    established sequentially by the memory of eye
    movements required to look from one feature to
    the next

24
  • Pictoral Information
  • Mackworth Morandi (1967) portions of a
    picture rated as highly informative by one group
    of people were fixated more frequently by another
    group of individuals who examined the pictures
    while their eye movements were measured.
  • Information one wishes to derive from a visual
    scene will determine the pattern of eye movement
    used in examining the picture
  • Loftus (1972) durations of eye fixations did
    not affect recall of a picture, but the number of
    fixations made during a fixed period of viewing
    did affect later recognition
  • The greater number of fixations, the more likely
    the person was to recognize the picture at
    another time
  • Initial fixes were on informative regions
    initially and the less informative detail
    received a greater portion of the fixations later
    in the viewing sequence

25
Part III Eye Illusions and the Startle Response
  • Sarah Leis

26
Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • There has been some attention paid to the study
    of eye movements while persons experience various
    kinds of visual illusions. This is one example.

27
Muller-Lyer Illusion (Contd)
  • With prolonged inspection the magnitude of the
    illusion decreases.
  • One hypothesis Due to feedback provided by
    erroneous eye movements
  • If eye movements restricted to one portion of the
    figure less 411 will be fed back

28
An experiment that supports the eye movements
hypothesis
  • Festinger, White, and Allyn
  • Found the Muller-Lyer illusion became less
    powerful when eye movements were made over the
    entire figure than when only one part of the
    figure was fixated.

29
Rebound Illusion
  • If a target moving at a constant velocity and
    tracked by the eyes comes to an abrupt stop, it
    appears to rebound sharply backward.
  • Can occur when the eyes pursue a luminous object
    in the dark.
  • Caused by an overshoot of the target by the eye
    at the point at which the target stops.
  • Suggests that position information during
    tracking is derived from efferent signals rather
    than feedback from the muscles.

30
EB Eye Blink Stats
  • Typical blink (measured by EOG) is about 380
    microvolts in amplitude and lasts 120 msec.
  • Spontaneous eye blinks occur throughout the day.
  • On average, 15-20 blinks a minute
  • Interestingly, adults need only 2-4 blinks a
    minute to keep the eyeball moist
  • So most blinks are unnecessary for a
    physiological viewpoint

31
Cognitive Activity and Eye Blinks
  • Activities that lead to thought lead to an
    increase in blinking.
  • Andreassi (1973) reported a significant increase
    in EB frequency when subjects were required to
    solve anagrams than when resting.
  • Tecce (1992) found that people conversing or
    involved in an interview showed increases in
    blink frequency
  • Blink frequency decreased when individuals gave
    close attention to outside visual events, perhaps
    to facilitate information processing
  • Oculomotor system is very sensitive to fatigue,
    boredom and lapses inattention

32
Eye Blinks and Information Processing
  • Long closure duration the time eyes remain
    closed during blinking
  • Long closure duration is related to alertness
  • During reading there is an inhibition of blinking
    which grows with interest in the material.
  • A flurry of blinks occurs as the reader turns the
    page
  • Stern (1985) found that blink rate and duration
    were both less in a visual task than an auditory
    one.
  • Blink suppression is due to increased cognitive
    demands that directs attention to task-relevant
    stimuli

33
Eye Blinks and Information Processing (Contd)
  • Blinks are delayed until decisions about external
    stimuli have been made and responses to those
    stimuli completed.
  • So, blink rate and duration may be related to
    cognitive functions such as decision-making and
    discrimination.
  • Fogarty and Stern (1989) found that a lower blink
    rate was found for a 6-item than a 2-item memory
    set.
  • This suggests that a lower blink rate reflects
    the greater attention demanded for performing the
    more difficult task involving 6 items

34
Blink Rate and Stress
  • Increased blink frequency generally reflects
    negative mood states such as nervousness, stress
    and fatigue
  • Nixon Effect During President Nixons
    resignation speech he blinked over 50 times per
    minute. He also displayed rapid bursts of blinks
    (3 per second), showing overall stress and a
    negative emotional state
  • Negative emotional states that accompany poor
    performance have been related to increases in
    blinking
  • More positive states are accompanied by decreased
    blink frequency
  • Tecce (1992) found that blink rate slows after
    hypnotic relaxation and successful problem
    solving
  • Hedonia-blink hypothesis decreased blinking is
    related to pleasant feelings, whereas increased
    frequency of blinks accompanies unpleasant mood
    states

35
Eye Blink and the Startle Response
  • Startle response the bodily reactions to a
    strong, rapid, unexpected stimulus
  • Physiological changes produced by the startle
    response include increases in eye blink (EB),
    heart rate, skin conductance, etc.
  • The fastest and most stable component of the
    response was the EB with a latency of 40 msec
  • Other fast components were widening of the mouth
    (70 msec), forward head movement (80 msec), and
    tightening of neck muscles (90 msec).

36
Startle Response in Emotion
  • Vrana, Spence and Lang (1988) used a high
    intensity noise burst to elect a startle response
    while college students viewed pleasant and
    unpleasant slides
  • The startle response (measured by EB magnitude),
    was largest when subjects viewed unpleasant
    stimuli and smallest for positive stimuli, as
    compared to neutral slides
  • The pleasant-unpleasantness of stimuli was
    confirmed by the participants ratings

37
Emotional Ratings and Physiological Arousal
  • Witvliet and Vrana (1995) compared EB startle
    magnitude and latency under conditions of
    negative and positive imagery that included both
    high and low arousal components. (EX fear and
    joy are negative and positive and are both high
    arousal. Sadness (negative) and pleasant
    relaxation (positive) are both low arousal.)
  • Found that EB magnitudes were larger and
    latencies were faster during negative as compared
    to positive imagery.
  • Higher arousal also led to larger magnitude and
    shorter latency EBs

38
Positive and Negative Sensory Experience
  • The EB component of he startle response has also
    been used to evaluate the emotional effects of
    positively and negatively rated odors.
  • Miltner, Matjak, Braun and Brody (1994) exposed
    subjects to an unpleasant odor (hydrogen sulfide)
    and a plesant odor (vanilla). They compared EB
    amplitude.
  • The negative odor significantly enhanced EB
    amplitude in comparison with neutral air
  • Reduction in EB with positive odor was not
    significant
  • This may have occurred because the emotional
    valence of vanilla was only about half as
    positive as the emotional valance of the hydrogen
    sulfide was negative

39
Positive and Negative Sensory Experience
(continued)
  • Ehlichman (1997) followed up the study and used a
    design in which participants experienced either a
    pleasant odor or an unpleasant one. (not both)
  • The odors wrre equal in terms of emotional
    valence ratings (pleasant coconut. Unpleasant
    limburger cheese)
  • The unpleasant odor increased the magnitude of
    the EB and unlike the Miltner study, the pleasant
    odor attenuated the EB complex of the startle
    response.

40
EB Component of Startle in Clinical Research
  • The notion that schizophrenics have difficulty
    with assimilation of percepts or processing
    sensory stimuli has existed for some time
  • Inhibition of the EB in startle reaction can
    index deficits in early information processing
    and may be related to underlying vulnerability
    factors
  • A number of studies have indicated that
    schizophrenics patients show reduced startle
    inhibition at short prepulse intervals
  • Normal individuals who score as psychosis prone
    on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality
    Inventory also show less startle inhibition
    compared to control individuals

41
More Clinical Research
  • Hamm (1997) studied the EB startle reflex in
    people with high fear (phobics) and low fear (non
    phobics) of animals or mutilation.
  • Participants viewed slides of fear relevant,
    unpleasant, neutral and pleasant scenes.
  • Animal and mutilation phobics showed larger EB
    facilitation than the non phobics when viewing
    un-pleasant scenes.
  • They showed greater EB magnitudes when viewing
    feared pictures than the nonphobics viewing the
    same or other unpleasant slides.
  • So, EB startle reflex indexes the individuals
    basic motivational disposition and can provide
    information for the assessment of fear responses.
  • Also, FYI, individuals with simple and social
    phobias, PTSD, and panic disorder all show
    enhancement of the startle EB while imagining
    scenes or viewing pictures that are threatening.

42
References
  • Andreassi, J.L. (2000). Psychophysiology
  • Human Behavior Physiological Response.
  • Mahwah, New Jersey Lawrence Erlbaum
  • Associates, Inc.
  • Figure taken from Psych 360- Lab 8- online at
    http//webpub.allegheny.edu/employee/a/adale/p360/
    lab8.html
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