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Impressum
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Instability of Fixation
Burkhart Fischer, Freiburger Blicklabor, Hans-Sachs-Gasse 6, 79098 Freiburg, Germany
burkhart.fischer@blicklabor.de
Preface
During the preparation of a congress in Switzerland inm 2008 the
article presented here was written in German language. Most of the data
included here are still unpublished. Under natural viewing conditions
and in certain situations it is neccesarry to maintain fixation at a
certain point of interest and to stopp fixation, when another saccade
must be generated. Fixation therefore is an active process in the brain.
Its role in the diagnosis of vision has been neglected for a long time
not only in neurosciences of eye movements and vision, but also in
Optometry and Ophthalmology.
The article refers only to the most important and closely related
literature and is far from complete. Comments are welcome anytime.
An English version of the full article is being prepared and will be
available here.
Contents
The following chapters are treated in the full text:
- Introduction
- Methods
- Results
- Binocular instability
- Eye dominance of the binocular instability
- Simple instability (involuntary saccades)
- Monocular optomotor training
- Poor reflex control (express saccades)
- Training of reflex control by training fixation
- The optomotor cycle
- Discussion
- References
Summary
While eye movements as a neccessary prerequisite for natural viewing become more and
more important in the diagnostic, fixation is not as established. This article deals with 3
different and independent types of instability of fixation, which can only be recognized by
recording and analysing eye movements: (i) the binocular instability, (ii) simple instability =
involuntary saccades during periods of fixating a stationary fixation point, (iii) excessive
optomotor reflexes (express saccades) among goal directed saccades in the presence of a
fixation point. The diagnostic data from children suffering from dyslexia are compared with
those of age matched controls. The third almost unknown typ of fixation instability is
demonstrated by the data of two "express makers". They produce reaction times shorter than
those of age matched controls. In an antisaccade task they exhibit enhanced percent numbers
of errors. A special optomotor training with one eye covered improves the binocular
instability, an exclusive fixation training reduces the chances of express saccades, but both
trainings hardly reduced the number of involuntary saccades. The results indicate that the
types of fixation instability are independent from each other.
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