Literature DB >> 34919586

The confounding effects of eye blinking on pupillometry, and their remedy.

Kyung Yoo1, Jeongyeol Ahn1, Sang-Hun Lee1.   

Abstract

Pupillometry, thanks to its strong relationship with cognitive factors and recent advancements in measuring techniques, has become popular among cognitive or neural scientists as a tool for studying the physiological processes involved in mental or neural processes. Despite this growing popularity of pupillometry, the methodological understanding of pupillometry is limited, especially regarding potential factors that may threaten pupillary measurements' validity. Eye blinking can be a factor because it frequently occurs in a manner dependent on many cognitive components and induces a pulse-like pupillary change consisting of constriction and dilation with substantive magnitude and length. We set out to characterize the basic properties of this "blink-locked pupillary response (BPR)," including the shape and magnitude of BPR and their variability across subjects and blinks, as the first step of studying the confounding nature of eye blinking. Then, we demonstrated how the dependency of eye blinking on cognitive factors could confound, via BPR, the pupillary responses that are supposed to reflect the cognitive states of interest. By building a statistical model of how the confounding effects of eye blinking occur, we proposed a probabilistic-inference algorithm of de-confounding raw pupillary measurements and showed that the proposed algorithm selectively removed BPR and enhanced the statistical power of pupillometry experiments. Our findings call for attention to the presence and confounding nature of BPR in pupillometry. The algorithm we developed here can be used as an effective remedy for the confounding effects of BPR on pupillometry.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34919586      PMCID: PMC8683032          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261463

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  56 in total

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-10-22       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Pupil size tracks perceptual content and surprise.

Authors:  Niels A Kloosterman; Thomas Meindertsma; Anouk M van Loon; Victor A F Lamme; Yoram S Bonneh; Tobias H Donner
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2015-03-06       Impact factor: 3.386

5.  A novel blink detection method based on pupillometry noise.

Authors:  Ronen Hershman; Avishai Henik; Noga Cohen
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2018-02

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Authors:  Ting Zhang; Di Mou; Cuicui Wang; Fengping Tan; Yan Jiang; Zheng Lijun; Hong Li
Journal:  Int J Psychophysiol       Date:  2015-04-23       Impact factor: 2.997

8.  Pupil Dilation Signals Surprise: Evidence for Noradrenaline's Role in Decision Making.

Authors:  Kerstin Preuschoff; Bernard Marius 't Hart; Wolfgang Einhäuser
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2011-09-30       Impact factor: 4.677

9.  Your eyes give you away: prestimulus changes in pupil diameter correlate with poststimulus task-related EEG dynamics.

Authors:  Linbi Hong; Jennifer M Walz; Paul Sajda
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-03-11       Impact factor: 3.240

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Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-07-29       Impact factor: 5.349

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  2 in total

1.  Methods in cognitive pupillometry: Design, preprocessing, and statistical analysis.

Authors:  Sebastiaan Mathôt; Ana Vilotijević
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2022-08-26

2.  Pupillometry and the vigilance decrement: Task-evoked but not baseline pupil measures reflect declining performance in visual vigilance tasks.

Authors:  Joel T Martin; Annalise H Whittaker; Stephen J Johnston
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2022-01-18       Impact factor: 3.698

  2 in total

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