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This work was supported in part by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of Spain under Grant PID2021-128469OB- I00 and Grant TED2021-131688B-I00, in part by Comunidad de Madrid, Spain, and in part by the Madrid ELLIS unit (European Laboratory for Learning & Intelligent Systems). The work of Julian D. Arias-London was supported by Universidad Politecnica de Madrid through a Maria Zambrano UP2021-035 grant funded by European Union-NextGenerationEU.
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Luque-Buzo, ElisaAutor o CoautorBejani, MehdiAutor o CoautorArias-Londono, Julian DAutor o CoautorGomez-Garcia, Jorge AAutor o CoautorGodino-Llorente, Juan IAutor (correspondencia)Estimation of the Cyclopean Eye From Binocular Smooth Pursuit Tests
Publicado en:Ieee Transactions On Cognitive And Developmental Systems. 16 (6): 2125-2137 - 2024-12-01 16(6), DOI: 10.1109/TCDS.2024.3410110
Autores: Luque-Buzo, E; Bejani, M; Arias-Londoño, JD; Gómez-García, JA; Grandas-Pérez, F; Godino-Llorente, JI
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Resumen
In binocular vision, the visual system combines images in the retina to generate a single perception, which triggers a sensorimotor process that forces the eyes to point to the same target. Thus, following a moving target, both eyes are expected to move synchronously following identical motor triggers but, in practise, significant differences between eyes are found due to the presence of certain artifacts and effects. Thus, a better indirect characterization of the underlying neurological behavior during eye motion would require new automatic preprocessing methods applied to the eye-tracking sequences for rendering the common and most significant movements of both eyes. To address this need, the present study proposes an automatic method for extracting the common components of the left- and right-eye motions from a set of Smooth Pursuit tests by applying an independent component analysis. To do so, both sequences are decomposed into two independent latent components: the first presumably correlates with the common motor triggering at the brain, while the second collects artifacts introduced during the recording process and small effects due to convergence deficits and eye dominance biases. The evaluations were carried out using data corresponding to 12 different smooth pursuit eye movements tests, which were collected using an infrared high-speed video-based eye-tracking device from 41 parkinsonian patients and 47 controls. The results show that the automatic method can separate the aforementioned components in 99.50% of cases, extracting a latent component correlated with the common motor triggering at the brain, which we hypothesize is characterizing the movements of the cyclopean eye. The estimated component could be used to simplify any other potential automatic analysis.
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Impacto bibliométrico. Análisis de la aportación y canal de difusión
El trabajo ha sido publicado en la revista Ieee Transactions On Cognitive And Developmental Systems debido a la progresión y el buen impacto que ha alcanzado en los últimos años, según la agencia WoS (JCR), se ha convertido en una referencia en su campo. En el año de publicación del trabajo, 2024 aún no existen indicios calculados, pero en 2023, se encontraba en la posición 55/314, consiguiendo con ello situarse como revista Q1 (Primer Cuartil), en la categoría Neurosciences.
Impacto y visibilidad social
Análisis de liderazgo de los autores institucionales
Existe un liderazgo significativo ya que algunos de los autores pertenecientes a la institución aparecen como primer o último firmante, se puede apreciar en el detalle: Primer Autor (LUQUE BUZO, ELISA) y Último Autor (GODINO LLORENTE, JUAN IGNACIO).
el autor responsable de establecer las labores de correspondencia ha sido GODINO LLORENTE, JUAN IGNACIO.