Head and Eye Tracking for Study of the VOR During Natural Head Motion. Allison, R., Eizenman, M., Tomlinson, R. D., Sharpe, J., Frecker, R. C., Anderson, J., & McIlmoy, L. In Sheppard, N. F., Eden, M., & Kantor, G., editors, Proceedings of the 16th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society - Engineering Advances: New Opportunities for Biomedical Engineers, Pts 1 and 2, pages 267-268, New York, 1994. IEEE.
Head and Eye Tracking for Study of the VOR During Natural Head Motion [link]-1  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Rotational testing of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) does not always correlate with patients' symptoms. One possible reason is that conventional testing is performed at low frequencies and relatively low velocities that do not correspond to the high frequency perturbations encountered during locomotion. The authors present a combined head-eye tracking system suitable for use with free head movement during natural activities. The system was used to study the response to rapid passive head turns in normal subjects and patients with unilateral lesions. The patients have marked, persistent VOR deficits for rotation toward the side of lesion. The implications of these results on the organization of the normal VOR and the process of VOR compensation are discussed
@inproceedings{allison1994267-268,
	abstract = {Rotational testing of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) does not always correlate with patients' symptoms. One possible reason is that conventional testing is performed at low frequencies and relatively low velocities that do not correspond to the high frequency perturbations encountered during locomotion. The authors present a combined head-eye tracking system suitable for use with free head movement during natural activities. The system was used to study the response to rapid passive head turns in normal subjects and patients with unilateral lesions. The patients have marked, persistent VOR deficits for rotation toward the side of lesion. The implications of these results on the organization of the normal VOR and the process of VOR compensation are discussed},
	address = {New York},
	author = {Allison, R.S. and Eizenman, M. and Tomlinson, R. D. and Sharpe, J. and Frecker, R. C. and Anderson, J. and McIlmoy, L.},
	booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society - Engineering Advances: New Opportunities for Biomedical Engineers, Pts 1 and 2},
	date-modified = {2014-02-03 14:36:42 +0000},
	doi = {10.1109/IEMBS.1994.412052},
	editor = {Sheppard, N. F. and Eden, M. and Kantor, G.},
	keywords = {Eye Movements & Tracking},
	pages = {267-268},
	publisher = {IEEE},
	title = {Head and Eye Tracking for Study of the VOR During Natural Head Motion},
	url-1 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/IEMBS.1994.412052},
	year = {1994},
	url-1 = {https://doi.org/10.1109/IEMBS.1994.412052}}

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