Results 291 to 300 of about 1,274,858 (326)
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Eye movements

Current Opinion in Neurology, 1996
Recent discoveries emanating from basic electrophysiological, anatomical, and pharmacological studies have implications for the diagnosis and treatment of clinical disorders of eye movements caused by disease affecting the brainstem and cerebellum. Electrophysiological studies have better defined the role of the superior colliculus in programming of ...
L, Averbuch-Heller, R J, Leigh
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Lightning eye movements

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 1976
Physiologic studies were performed on a patient who demonstrated lightning eye movements, palatal myoclonus and myoclonic jerks of the left platysma and sternocleidomastoid muscles. The myoclonus and lightning eye movements were separate phenomena with no defined relationship to each other.
J N, Alpert, H, Suga, E, Perusquia
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Fetal eye movements

Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1993
AbstractSince 1981, when eye movements of the human fetus were first reported, the study of fetal eye movements has increased, mainly focusing on the ontogenesis of eye movements and as one parameter of behavioral states. Using real‐time ultrasound, fetal eye movements can be clearly observed from 14 weeks of gestational age. Fetal eye movements may be
Horimoto, N.   +3 more
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Eye Movement Abnormalities

2012
Generation and control of eye movements requires the participation of the cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum and brainstem. The signals of this complex neural network finally converge on the ocular motoneurons of the brainstem. Infarct or hemorrhage at any level of the oculomotor system (though more frequent in the brain-stem) may give rise to a broad ...
Jorge, Moncayo, Julien, Bogousslavsky
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Eye movement disorders

Current Opinion in Ophthalmology, 1995
The ophthalmic, neurologic, and neuro-ophthalmic literature over the past year have included a wide variety of interesting case reports, patient series, and reviews involving eye movement abnormalities. This review highlights some of the more important articles and how they contribute to our understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of these disorders. A
G T, Liu, N J, Volpe, S L, Galetta
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Slow eye movements

Progress in Neurobiology, 1997
Monkeys and humans are able to perform different types of slow eye movements. The analysis of the eye movement parameters, as well as the investigation of the neuronal activity underlying the execution of slow eye movements, offer an excellent opportunity to study higher brain functions such as motion processing, sensorimotor integration, and ...
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RAPID EYE MOVEMENTS AND RAPID EYE MOVEMENT PERIODS

Psychophysiology, 1969
ABSTRACTRapid eye movements (REMs) are recorded separately in the horizontal and vertical plane during 40 emergent Stage 1 EEG periods. 40% of all REMs are recorded exclusively in the horizontal plane; 32%, exclusively in the vertical. But vertical REMs tend to precede horizontal at the onset of Stage 1 and to follow horizontal REMs at the offset ...
J S, Antrobus, J S, Antrobus
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Eye Movement Recording

Nature, 1959
RECENT work on the time course of eye movements has led to the development of a new technique of measurement. This was required to deal, in addition to the normal static situation, with conditions where space and the rigid laboratory bench are absent; for example, in a rotating chair and the human centrifuge. A wide range of sensitivity, simplicity and
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Eye movement disorders

Current Opinion in Neurology, 1993
The past year's literature on eye movements is characterized by two trends: first by the examination of eye movement organization in the three planes of eye rotation in normal subjects (there is yet no publication about abnormalities of this three-dimensional organization in patients) and second by the increasing awareness of clinicians that the ...
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