EYE-MOVEMENTS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA - QUANTITATIVE-ANALYSIS

  • 1 January 1979
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 14 (1), 13-26
Abstract
A quantitative comparison of smooth pursuit eye movements of acute and chronic human schizophrenics was made. Horizontal, vertical, diagonals and pendulum tracking targets with constant or variable velocity were presented. The frequency of saccades and the magnitude of the spatial and temporal error during tracking was significantly greater among schizophrenics than among normals. The differences between acutes and chronics were not generally significant. Performance differences were generally unaffected by the type of stimulus. The frequency of nontracked half-cycles and eye blinks was greater for chronics than for acutes or normals, and greater for acutes than normals. Sustained voluntary attention was apparently more difficult for schizophrenics in general and chronic schizophrenics in particular. A distinctive pattern of saccade bursts was observed in the fixation and tracking records of schizophrenic subjects. These bursts were suggestive of an oculomotor deficit.

This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: