Eye-Tracking Biomarkers
Cross-source consensus on Eye-Tracking Biomarkers from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Preparation
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- Eye movements and pupil diameter will be measured with an SR Research EyeLink Portable Duo remote eye-tracking system at 500 Hz. — Autism outcomes and neurobehavioural markers in young children born to mothers with HIV in Kenya: a protocol for the Alama project
- The study uses eye tracking because it is described as non-invasive, relatively low-cost, scalable, and potentially feasible in resource-constrained settings. — Autism outcomes and neurobehavioural markers in young children born to mothers with HIV in Kenya: a protocol for the Alama project
- The eye-tracking battery will examine social attention, non-social attention, neuromodulator-related function, and basic oculomotor metrics. — Autism outcomes and neurobehavioural markers in young children born to mothers with HIV in Kenya: a protocol for the Alama project
- The Alama eye-tracking battery uses culturally appropriate images and videos adapted from earlier paradigms. — Autism outcomes and neurobehavioural markers in young children born to mothers with HIV in Kenya: a protocol for the Alama project
- Prior work in high-income countries indicates that eye-tracking markers can distinguish young children with autism and assay relevant neurocognitive processes. — Autism outcomes and neurobehavioural markers in young children born to mothers with HIV in Kenya: a protocol for the Alama project
- Pupillary light reflex is presented as an autism-relevant marker associated with acetylcholine and later diagnosis or symptom severity in prior studies. — Autism outcomes and neurobehavioural markers in young children born to mothers with HIV in Kenya: a protocol for the Alama project