Protocol Number: 08-EI-0031
-The relation between eye movement and brain function is a subject of interest to the National Eye Institute. -By comparing eye movement in healthy volunteers to research conducted on patients who have difficulty moving their eyes, the National Eye Institute hopes to develop and improve diagnostic procedures for people with eye diseases. Objectives: -To study eye movement in 100 healthy adult and child volunteers. -To understand how individuals see visual patterns and how eye movement affects the ability to see. Eligibility: -Volunteers must have no serious illnesses and must be 2 years of age or older (5 years of age or older if contact lenses are used to record eye movement). -Volunteers who are 5 years of age or older must be willing to wear contact lenses that record eye movement. -Individuals with a history of eye or brain diseases, or previous eye or eye muscle surgery, are not allowed to participate in this study. Individuals who are currently using eye medications also are not eligible for the study. Design: -Participants will visit the National Eye Institute outpatient clinic for examination and testing. -Participants will be screened with a medical history and eye examination (including eye pressure and eye movement tests). -Participants with healthy eyes will participate in eye movement testing experiments: --One or more sessions lasting less than three hours each. --Eye movements will be recorded with either a special contact lens or a video/infrared camera system. --For the majority of the studies done under this protocol, only one or two sessions will be required. A few studies recording very small eye movements will require three or more sessions.
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National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
Bethesda, Maryland 20892. Last update: 01/17/2009
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