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Eye Exercises Enhance Accuracy and Letter Recognition,but Not Reaction Time,in a Modified Rapid Serial Visual Presentation Task
Authors:Paula Di Noto  Sorin Uta  Joseph F. X. DeSouza
Affiliation:1. Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Canada.; 2. Neuroscience Graduate Diploma Program, York University, Toronto, Canada.; 3. Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto, Canada.; 4. Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, Canada.; 5. Canadian Action and Perception Network (CAPnet), Toronto, Canada.; CNRS - Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France,
Abstract:Eye exercises have been prescribed to resolve a multitude of eye-related problems. However, studies on the efficacy of eye exercises are lacking, mainly due to the absence of simple assessment tools in the clinic. Because similar regions of the brain are responsible for eye movements and visual attention, we used a modified rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) to assess any measurable effect of short-term eye exercise in improvements within these domains. In the present study, twenty subjects were equally divided into control and experimental groups, each of which performed a pre-training RSVP assessment where target letters, to which subjects were asked to respond to by pressing a spacebar, were serially and rapidly presented. Response time to target letters, accuracy of correctly responding to target letters, and correct identification of target letters in each of 12 sessions was measured. The experimental group then performed active eye exercises, while the control group performed a task that minimized eye movements for 18.5 minutes. A final post-training RSVP assessment was performed by both groups and response time, accuracy, and letter identification were compared between and within subject groups both pre- and post-training. Subjects who performed eye exercises were more accurate in responding to target letters separated by one distractor and in letter identification in the post-training RSVP assessment, while latency of responses were unchanged between and within groups. This suggests that eye exercises may prove useful in enhancing cognitive performance on tasks related to attention and memory over a very brief course of training, and RSVP may be a useful measure of this efficacy. Further research is needed on eye exercises to determine whether they are an effective treatment for patients with cognitive and eye-related disorders.
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