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JoVE Journal
Neuroscience
Using Eye-tracking to Assess the Relative Importance of Visual and Vestibular Input to Subcortica...
Using Eye-tracking to Assess the Relative Importance of Visual and Vestibular Input to Subcortica...
JoVE Journal
Neuroscience
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JoVE Journal Neuroscience
Using Eye-tracking to Assess the Relative Importance of Visual and Vestibular Input to Subcortical Motion Processing in the Roll Plane

Using Eye-tracking to Assess the Relative Importance of Visual and Vestibular Input to Subcortical Motion Processing in the Roll Plane

Full Text
478 Views
07:24 min
August 22, 2025

DOI: 10.3791/68289-v

Tobias Wibble1,2, Tony Pansell1,2

1Marianne Bernadotte Centrum, Department for Clinical Neuroscience,Karolinska Institutet, 2St Erik Eye Hospital

Overview

This study investigates the contributions of visual and vestibular systems to gaze stabilization during various motion stimuli. Using eye-tracking methodologies, the research aims to elucidate how these sensory inputs interplay at the subcortical level, particularly in the context of conditions like concussion that may affect visual stability and motion perception.

Key Study Components

Area of Science

  • Neuroscience
  • Sensory Integration
  • Motor Control

Background

  • The study focuses on eye movements as indicators of brain function.
  • Understanding the interaction between vision, balance, and motion perception is crucial for developing diagnostics and treatments in neurology.
  • Prior findings suggest that concussion may heighten sensitivity to visual motion, leading to symptoms like visual vertigo.

Purpose of Study

  • To quantify the contributions of visual and vestibular systems to motion perception.
  • To explore how these components could indicate disease progression and treatment response in neurological disorders.
  • To investigate potential interventions, such as Galvanic stimulation, to alleviate motion sickness.

Methods Used

  • Eye-tracking methodology in a controlled environment with a head-mounted eye tracker.
  • Human subjects seated securely while undergoing visual and vestibular stimulus trials.
  • Experimental designs included visual-only, vestibular-only, and visuo-vestibular trials.
  • Data analysis focused on tracking torsional, vertical, and horizontal eye movements over various stimulus conditions.

Main Results

  • Findings indicate that visuo-vestibular trials produced the highest torsional slow phase velocity, demonstrating additive multisensory integration.
  • Patients exhibited altered sensory weighting post-concussion, with a notable reduction in vestibular contributions during certain trials.
  • The study confirms an acceleration-dependent sensitivity in eye movement responses.

Conclusions

  • This research enhances the understanding of sensory contributions to gaze stability, particularly in a clinical context.
  • It lays groundwork for potential interventions aimed at improving balance and reducing motion-related symptoms in affected individuals.
  • The study's insights on visual-vestibular integration may inform future treatments for neurological conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the significance of eye movement tracking in this study?
Eye movement tracking is critical for assessing the integration of visual and vestibular inputs, helping to elucidate brain function related to balance and motion perception.
How are visual and vestibular contributions tested?
Contributions are tested through various trial conditions, including visual-only, vestibular-only, and visuo-vestibular trials to analyze response differences in eye movements.
What implications do the findings have for concussion patients?
Findings suggest altered sensory weighting in concussion patients, which may contribute to visual vertigo and inform treatment approaches to manage symptoms.
What are the key methodological steps in the eye-tracking process?
Subjects are securely seated, a head-mounted eye tracker is calibrated, and visual stimuli are presented in a controlled environment to ensure accurate recordings of eye movements.
Can the methods employed be adapted for other studies?
Yes, the eye-tracking methodology can be adapted for assessing different types of sensorimotor integration across various clinical and experimental contexts.
What limitations should be considered in this study?
Limitations may include individual variability in response to stimuli and the controlled conditions that might not entirely replicate real-world scenarios.

The methodology explored visual and vestibular contributions to gaze stabilization during optokinetic and whole-body rotations. Stimulations were carried out through visual, vestibular, and visuovestibular trials. Torsional eye-movement gain and nystagmus frequencies served as indicators for the subcortical relay of sensory-specific motion information towards the reflexive brainstem response for each trial.

We study how eye movements reflect brain function. The aim is to develop better diagnostics and treatments for neurological conditions by understanding how vision, balance, and motion perception interact. We have established a method quantifying visual and vestibular contributions to motion perception at the subcortical level, showing how concussion may lead to visual vertigo through increased sensitivity to visual motion.

We will explore how eye movements contract disease progression and treatment response in neurological disorders. We are currently exploring how Galvanic super cortical stimulation might decrease motion sickness and promote gaze stability. To begin, seat the subject securely in the designated chair for all trials.

Adjust the chair position to provide both stability and comfort and to reduce the risk of unwanted head movements or mask slippage. Using hook and loop straps, place and secure the head-mounted eye tracker onto the subject's head to minimize head movement. Confirm that the eye tracker cameras have a clear and unobstructed view of the subject's eyes throughout all movements.

Modify the rotation point height to accommodate individual height differences. Then adjust the rotation point of the mechanical sled so that the axis of whole body rotation is set between the subject's eyes. Firmly secure the head-mounted tracker to the subject's head.

Choose a high contrast visual scene composed of scattered lines or dots centered around a fixation point. Position the fixation point so it aligns directly in front of the subject's eyes, both vertically and horizontally. Eliminate all distracting light sources in the room so that the visual scene is the only source of illumination.

Use a display screen that is large enough to fill the subject's entire visual field. Instruct the subject to keep their gaze fixed on the central point throughout the trial. Then start the eye and head tracking software and present the static visual scene for 10 seconds before beginning any motion.

Between one and two seconds before initiating motion, instruct the subject to keep their eyes wide open. Begin the visual motion by rotating the scene to a fixed amplitude at a predetermined acceleration. Ensure the room is completely dark to remove any visual directional cues.

Secure the subject in the mechanized sled to minimize unintended head or body movements. Inform the subject that the trial is about to start. Then start the eye and head tracking software, allowing a ten-second interval to pass before initiating the movement.

Between one and two seconds before movement onset, instruct the subject to keep their eyes wide open. Activate the mechanical sled to perform a head rotation with the same amplitude and acceleration used for the visual motion stimulation. Use an eye tracking software to analyze the recorded eye tracking videos and extract torsional, vertical, and horizontal eye movements.

Configure and calibrate the pupil tracking function according to the system's guidelines. For torsional response analysis, select two reference points with distinct topographical features on either side of the pupil for each eye, enabling accurate template matching. Run the analysis program to generate positional data over time and export all eye movement data into a separate file.

Now digitize the input data from the eye tracking system, including eye movements, head position, and chair motion. Visually inspect the imported data for each trial to review torsional, vertical, and horizontal eye positions over time, along with head position in the roll plane. Then confirm a stable baseline and expected movement responses across all data streams.

To analyze slow phases, manually trace each torsional slow phase to exclude any remaining confounding data. Evaluate the timing of nystagmus beats by marking the onset of each quick phase and counting the total number of quick phases per trial and subject. Include all slow phase traces from every trial and subject to ensure representative high-powered statistical data.

To evaluate sensory contributions, divide each subject's mean slow phase velocity from visual-only and vestibular-only trials by that from visuo-vestibular trials averaged per acceleration condition. Across all stimulation conditions, visuo-vestibular trials produced the highest torsional slow phase velocities, while visual-only trials resulted in the lowest, validating additive multisensory integration. Torsional velocity increased systematically with higher stimulus acceleration across all modalities, demonstrating acceleration-dependent sensitivity.

Patients showed significantly higher torsional slow phase velocities than controls during both visual and visuo-vestibular stimulation, but not during vestibular-only trials. Eye stimulus gain was highest during visuo-vestibular trials, moderate during vestibular-only, and lowest in visual-only stimulation, confirming modality-specific tracking sensitivity. Relative contribution analysis showed that vestibular input consistently outweighed visual input at all acceleration levels, with the disparity increasing at higher accelerations.

Compared to controls, patients had reduced vestibular contribution and increased visual contribution, indicating altered sensory weighting post-concussion. Nystagmus beat frequency did not differ across groups or modalities, but patients exhibited earlier onset of beats in visual trials, especially at higher accelerations.

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