| Literature DB >> 30728804 |
Ioannis Bargiotas1,2, Albane Moreau3, Alienor Vienne1, Flavie Bompaire3,4, Marie Baruteau3,4, Marie de Laage3, Matéo Campos3, Dimitri Psimaras3,4, Nicolas Vayatis2, Christophe Labourdette2, Pierre-Paul Vidal1,5, Damien Ricard1,3,4,6, Stéphane Buffat1,4,7.
Abstract
Background: Recent studies have shown that alterations in executive function and attention lead to balance control disturbances. One way of exploring the allocation of attention is to record eye movements. Most experimental data come from a free viewing of static scenes but additional information can be leveraged by recording eye movements during natural tasks. Here, we aimed to provide evidence of a correlation between impaired visual alteration in natural tasks and postural control in patients suffering from Radiation-Induced Leukoencephalopathy (RIL).Entities:
Keywords: attention; balance control; dysexecutive syndrome; ecological tasks; eye movements; machine learning; radiation-induced leukoencephalopathy
Year: 2019 PMID: 30728804 PMCID: PMC6351469 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.01185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Synthetic view of characteristics for the participants' sample.
| Mean age (in years) | 50.9 ±15.9 | 43.4 ±10.2 |
| Women | 4 | 3 |
| Delay since brain irradiation (years) | 13.6 ± 13 | – |
| Glioma | 5 | – |
| Medulloblastoma | 2 | – |
| Astrocytoma | 1 | – |
| Prophylactic brain irradiation | 1 | – |
| Primitive central nervous system lymphoma | 1 | – |
Recipe and associated elements per instruction.
| 1. Melt the chocolate and the butter in the microwave. Mix well the two ingredients (The microwave is already programmed, just press | • Chocolate bar |
| 2. Mix the flour, the sugar and the egg yolks in a bowl. | • Flour |
| 3. Stir the chocolate-butter mixture into the previous mixture. | • Optional: opening / closing oven if the mixture |
| 4. Beat the egg whites with the electric mixer until stiff and fluffy. | • Electric mixer (plug, turn on) |
| 5. Gently incorporate the egg whites in the mixture with a wooden spoon. | • Wooden spoon |
| 6. Pour the mixture into the mold. | • Bowl with mix |
Figure 1Snapshot of a patient while reading the recipe. Note that the participant is wearing a Tobii glasses 2® eye tracking device and that there is a Clinical Research Nurse in the background. Written informed consent was obtained from the participant for the publication of this image.
Visual parameters that were initially calculated and included in the model.
| RangeX (degrees/s) | Range of horizontal eye movement per second during task |
| RangeY (degrees/s) | Range of vertical eye movement per second during task |
| RatioRange | RatioX/RatioY |
| VarianceX (degrees/s) | Variance of horizontal eye movement per second during task |
| VarianceY (degrees/s) | Variance of vertical eye movement per second during task |
| VelocityX (degrees/s) | Average instant velocity of horizontal eye movement during task |
| VelocityY (degrees/s) | Average instant velocity of vertical eye movement during task |
| Velocity (degrees/s) | Average instant velocity of eye movement during task |
| EllArea(degrees/s)Horizontal and vertical field of view | Confidence ellipse that covers the 95% of the trajectory points. The horizontal and vertical field of view per second are the axes of the ellipse. |
| MeanFix (ms) | Average duration of fixations during task |
| VarianceFix (ms) | Variance of durations of fixations during task |
| SkewFix | Skewness of durations of fixations during task |
| KurtFix | Kurtosis of durations of fixations during task |
| MeanSac (ms) | Average duration of saccades during task |
| VarianceSac (ms) | Variance of durations of saccades during task |
| SkewSac | Skewness of durations of saccades during task |
| KurtSac | Kurtosis of durations of saccades during task |
| Fix2SacNratio | Number of Fixations/Number of Saccades |
This table separates the parameters into dynamic [mostly inspired by the posture evaluation literature (.
Patients' MATTIS-Attention sub-scores.
| Patient 1 | 23/37 |
| Patient 2 | 25/37 |
| Patient 3 | 34/37 |
| Patient 4 | 34/37 |
| Patient 5 | 34/37 |
| Patient 6 | 35/37 |
| Patient 7 | 36/37 |
| Patient 8 | 36/37 |
| Patient 9 | 37/37 |
| Patient10 | 37/37 |
Figure 2Boxplot of postural score between controls and patients who suffer from radio-induced leukoencephalopathy (RIL). Red lines inside the boxes indicate median and end of boxes indicate the whiskers. Non-parametric Wilcoxon test showed that RIL's score was found significantly lower compared to those of healthy controls (p < 0.01).
Average (±SD) of the included variables for RIL patients with relatively low and medium postural score.
| RangeX (degrees/s) | 14.6 ± 5.6 | 6.0 ± 1.6 | 10.7 ± 4.5 |
| RangeY (degrees/s) | 9.5 ± 3.7 | 3.4 ± 1.0 | 5.5 ± 2.1 |
| RatioRange | 1.6 ± 0.6 | 2.0 ± 0.8 | 2.1 ± 0.8 |
| VarianceX (degrees/s) | 4.8 ± 1.7 | 2.1 ± 0.5 | 3.6 ± 1.4 |
| VarianceY (degrees/s) | 3.1 ± 1.1 | 1.2 ± 0.4 | 1.8 ± 0.7 |
| VelocityX (degrees/s) | 65 ± 22 | 23 ± 12 | 67 ± 87 |
| VelocityY (degrees/s) | 52 ± 8 | 18 ± 8 | 38 ± 31 |
| Velocity (degrees/s) | 92 ± 91 | 33 ± 15 | 85 ± 97 |
| EllArea(degrees/s), (field of view) (Horizontal/Vertical) | H:27.6 ± 9, V:10 ± 3.4 | H:12 ± 2.5, V:3.7 ± 1.2 | H:20.5 ± 7, V:6.4 ± 2.7 |
| MeanFix (ms) | 153 ± 31 | 316 ± 141 | 226 ± 89 |
| VarianceFix (ms) | 169 ± 63 | 318 ± 149 | 134 ± 60 |
| SkewFix | 6.1 ± 4.2 | 3.1 ± 1.6 | 1.7 ± 0.8 |
| MeanSac (ms) | 52 ± 11 | 41 ± 5 | 44 ± 9 |
| VarianceSac (ms) | 39 ± 28 | 28 ± 11 | 36 ± 14 |
| SkewSac | 3.2 ± 1.8 | 1.8 ± 0.7 | 2.7 ± 1.6 |
| Fix2SacNratio | 0.37 ± 0.15 | 1.05 ± 0.36 | 0.74 ± 0.35 |
RIL patients with relatively higher postural score had many ocular parameters significantly different (see Table .
Figure 3Oculomotor Parameters' importance resulted by the prediction importance algorithm. Red lines indicate the median and the horizontal lines of boxes indicate the whiskers. The biomarkers with low whisker >0.1 were considered as predictors that have very high possibility to have a beneficial effect on the final predictions.
Biomarkers that were found valuable in the prediction process of the postural score for RIL patients.
| RangeX | 0.16 (0.15, 0.18) |
| RangeY | 0.24 (0.18, 0.27) |
| VarianceX | 0.12 (0.02, 0.18) |
| VarianceY | 0.19 (0.11, 0.26) |
| VelocityX | 0.21 (0.17, 0.24) |
| VelocityY | 0.18 (0.15, 0.23) |
| Velocity | 0.21 (0.20, 0.22) |
| EllArea | 0.32 (0.29, 0.34) |
| MeanSac | 0.15 (0.12, 0.21) |
| Fix2SacNratio | 0.18 (0.15, 0.23) |
Horizontal and vertical eye movement increase significantly with the loss of postural control (see Table .
Figure 4(A) Scatter plot between observed and predicted postural score of RIL patients using all the oculomotor biomarkers mentioned in Table 2 (RMSE = 0.2). (B) Scatter plot between observed and predicted postural score using only the selected oculomotor biomarkers mentioned in Table 5 (RMSE = 0.16). Both graphs contain an outlier prediction which increases the RMSE significantly (Red star).