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Journal Article

Citation

Ojanpää H, Näsänen R, Päällysaho J, Akila R, Müller K, Kaukiainen A, Sainio M. Neurotoxicology 2006; 27(6): 1013-1023.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, P.O. Box 9 (Siltavuorenpenger 20 D), FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland. helena.ojanpaa@iki.fi

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.neuro.2006.04.009

PMID

16765447

Abstract

Various aspects of visual perception have been found to be impaired in patients with occupational chronic solvent-induced toxic encephalopathy (CSE). The purpose of the study was to characterise the changes in eye movements and visual search performance in CSE patients. We measured eye movements of 13 CSE patients and 22 healthy controls during dynamic visual search task by using a fast video eye tracker. The task was to search for and identify a target letter among numerals presented in a rectangular stimulus matrix (3x3-10x10 items). Threshold search time, i.e. the duration of stimulus presentation required for identifying the target with a given probability was determined by using a psychophysical staircase method. The visual search times of the CSE patients were clearly longer, and they needed considerably more eye fixations than healthy controls to find the target. Thus, their reduced performance in this task was mainly related to the reduction in the number of items which could be processed during a single eye fixation (perceptual span). This reduction probably reflects a limited capacity of visual attention, since visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, and the oculomotor saccade velocity were found to be normal. The results suggest that motor slowness or low-level visual factors do not explain the poor performance of CSE patients in visual search tasks. The results are also discussed with respect to the effects of education, and compared to the performance in the widely used neuropsychological Trail Making Test, which uses similar stimuli and requires visual search.


Language: en

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