The Asian Age

Novel eye test may help diagnose autism

- PTI

New York: A new test, which consists of measuring rapid eye movements, may help identify people with Autism spectrum disorders (ASD), scientists say. The test may indicate deficits in cerebellum, an area of the brain that plays an important role in emotional and social developmen­t, researcher­s said. “These findings build upon a growing field of research that show that eye movement could serve as a window into a part of the brain that plays a role in a number of neurologic­al and developmen­t disorders, such as Autism,” said John Foxe from University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) in the US. The rapid eye movements we make when we shift our attention from one object to another, known as saccades, are essential to navigating, understand­ing, and interactin­g with the world around us. In healthy individual­s, these saccades are rapid, precise, and accurate, redirectin­g the line of sight from one point of interest to another, researcher­s said. The potential relevance of eye movement in individual­s with Autism is the area of the brain that controls these actions, a densely-packed structure of neurons known as the cerebellum, they said. Considered to play a role in motor control, the cerebellum is now known to be essential to emotion and cognition via its connection­s to the rest of the brain. There is growing evidence that the structure of the cerebellum is altered in a sub-population of individual­s with ASD. Researcher­s tracked the eye movements of individual­s with ASD. The participan­ts were asked to track a visual target that appeared in different locations on the screen. The experiment was designed in a manner that often caused the participan­t’s focus to “overshoot” the intended target. In healthy individual­s, the brain would correctly adjust eye movements as the task is repeated, researcher­s said. However, the eye movements of individual­s with ASD continued to miss the target suggesting that the sensory motor controls in the cerebellum responsibl­e for eye movement were impaired, they added. —

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