1 results match your criteria: "University of Richmond (Drs Wares and Hoke)[Affiliation]"
J Head Trauma Rehabil
September 2015
Departments of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (Drs Cifu and Carne) and Biomedical Engineering (Drs Wetzel and Gitchel), Virginia Commonwealth University; Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Program Office of the Department of Veterans Affairs (Dr Cifu); and Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Richmond (Drs Wares and Hoke), Richmond, Virginia.
Objectives: Objective measures to diagnose and to monitor improvement of symptoms following mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) are lacking. Computerized eye tracking has been advocated as a rapid, user friendly, and field-ready technique to meet this need.
Design: Eye-tracking data collected via a head-mounted, video-based binocular eye tracker was used to examine saccades, fixations, and smooth pursuit movement in military Service Members with postconcussive syndrome (PCS) and asymptomatic control subjects in an effort to determine if eye movement differences could be found and quantified.