School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, N2L 3G1, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, N2L 3G1, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Exp Eye Res. 2019 Jun;183:38-45. doi: 10.1016/j.exer.2018.08.020. Epub 2018 Aug 30.
The purpose of the study was to analyze vertical saccade parameters (latency, peak velocity, amplitude gain), and compare them to those of horizontal saccades in a cross-sectional study across the ages of the human lifespan. One hundred and thirty one participants (62 males) between the ages of 3 and 86 years made vertical prosaccades of 2-44° in response to a dot stimulus projected on a screen. A subset of participants also made horizontal prosaccades of 2-60° under the same conditions. The El-Mar (Downsview, Ontario, Canada) eye tracker was used to record binocular eye movements. Measures of saccadic latency, peak velocity and amplitude gain were calculated for each participant. Differences between saccade parameters for upward & downward saccades were calculated. Vertical saccade parameters were evaluated as a function of age and age related differences between vertical and horizontal saccade parameters were determined. There was no significant difference between upward and downward saccades and no effect of age for either latency or peak velocity. Downward saccades had significantly higher gains than upward saccades (p = 0.0001) and this difference increased significantly with age (p = 0.001). Vertical saccadic latency initially decreased from about 400 ms at 4 years of age, remained stable for a period of time and then increases again in later life. The lowest peak velocities were found in participants under 20 and over 70 years of age, while the highest peak velocities were seen in participants between 20 and 60 years of age. The majority of vertical saccades were hypometric. Saccadic amplitude gains varied depending on both the stimulus size (p = 0.0001) and age (p = 0.0001) of participants. Vertical saccades are most accurate for small amplitudes and for participants between 20 and 30 years of age. Vertical saccades had significantly longer latencies than horizontal saccades (p = 0.0001) but there was no significant effect of age. Vertical saccades had lower peak velocities than horizontal saccades in very young children but this difference decreased with age (p = 0.0015). Large vertical saccades were more hypometric than their horizontal counterparts across all ages. The observed differences in saccadic parameters could be related to the different areas in the brain used for saccadic generation, different periods and/or mechanisms of development and senescence within the visual system and brain and/or the effects of differential use.
本研究的目的是分析垂直扫视参数(潜伏期、峰速度、振幅增益),并在跨人类生命周期的年龄的横断面研究中对其与水平扫视参数进行比较。131 名参与者(62 名男性)年龄在 3 至 86 岁之间,对屏幕上投射的点刺激做出 2-44°的垂直正扫视。部分参与者在相同条件下也做出 2-60°的水平正扫视。使用 El-Mar(安大略省 Downsview,加拿大)眼动追踪器记录双眼运动。为每个参与者计算扫视潜伏期、峰速度和振幅增益的测量值。计算了上、下扫视之间扫视参数的差异。评估了垂直扫视参数作为年龄的函数,并确定了垂直和水平扫视参数之间的年龄相关差异。上、下扫视之间没有显著差异,也没有年龄对潜伏期或峰速度的影响。下扫视的增益明显高于上扫视(p=0.0001),并且这种差异随着年龄的增加而显著增加(p=0.001)。垂直扫视潜伏期最初从 4 岁时的约 400ms 开始下降,在一段时间内保持稳定,然后在以后的生活中再次增加。在 20 岁以下和 70 岁以上的参与者中发现最低的峰速度,而在 20 至 60 岁的参与者中发现最高的峰速度。大多数垂直扫视是低幅度的。扫视幅度增益取决于参与者的刺激大小(p=0.0001)和年龄(p=0.0001)。垂直扫视对于小幅度和 20 至 30 岁之间的参与者最准确。垂直扫视的潜伏期明显长于水平扫视(p=0.0001),但年龄没有显著影响。垂直扫视在非常年幼的儿童中比水平扫视的峰速度低,但随着年龄的增长(p=0.0015)这种差异减小。在所有年龄段,大的垂直扫视比其水平对应物更易出现低幅度。扫视参数的观察到的差异可能与用于扫视产生的大脑不同区域、视觉系统和大脑内不同的发育和衰老时期和/或机制以及不同使用的影响有关。