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Saccadic contributions to smooth pursuit in macular degeneration

•Eye movements in macular degeneration (MD) show great inter-subject variability.•Individuals with macular degeneration (MD) have misdirected saccades.•During pursuit, saccades in MD can be misaligned with target trajectory.•Viewing eccentricity significantly correlates with extent of saccade misali...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Vision research (Oxford) 2022-11, Vol.200, p.108102-108102, Article 108102
Main Authors: Shanidze, Natela M., Lively, Zachary, Lee, Rachel, Verghese, Preeti
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Eye movements in macular degeneration (MD) show great inter-subject variability.•Individuals with macular degeneration (MD) have misdirected saccades.•During pursuit, saccades in MD can be misaligned with target trajectory.•Viewing eccentricity significantly correlates with extent of saccade misalignment. Saccades during smooth pursuit can help bring the fovea on target, particularly in cases of low pursuit gain. Individuals with macular degeneration often suffer damage to the central retina including the fovea, which impacts oculomotor function such as fixation, saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements. We hypothesized that these oculomotor changes in macular degeneration (MD) would make saccades less appropriately directed (even if more numerous). To investigate saccades during pursuit in MD, we conducted a quantitative analysis of smooth pursuit eye movement data from a prior study, Vision Research 141 (2017) 181–190. Here we examined saccade frequency, magnitude, and direction across viewing conditions for MD and control participants during pursuit of a target moving in a modified step-ramp paradigm. Individuals with MD had more variability in saccade directions that included directions orthogonal to the target trajectory. PRL eccentricity significantly correlated with increases in saccades in non-target directions during smooth pursuit. These results suggest that a large number of saccades during pursuit in MD participants are unlikely to be catch-up saccades that serve to keep the eye on the target.
ISSN:0042-6989
1878-5646
1878-5646
DOI:10.1016/j.visres.2022.108102