Measuring pupillary light reflex Georgina Lynch lab (IMAGE) Washington State University Caption A staff member in Georgina Lynch’s lab at the Washington State University Spokane campus demonstrates ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Capturing objective data in about five seconds that can aid concussion diagnoses through an iPhone, the Reflex PLR Analyzer, an industry-disruptive diagnostic tool for traumatic ...
SPOKANE, Wash.—Measuring how the eyes’ pupils change in response to light—known as the pupillary light reflex—could potentially be used to screen for autism in young children, according to a study ...
Pupil size in response to light could serve as a biomarker for concussion, according to a study published in Life. “A concussive injury to the brain is associated with changes in the PLR [pupillary ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – The Legacy Concussion Foundation estimates that 5 out of 6 concussions are undiagnosed. New advances for a neurological diagnostic tool for traumatic brain injury and various ...
Objective Pupillary light reflex (PLR) metrics are enhanced in adolescents with concussion. It is not known if these PLR metrics in concussed adolescents return back to the normal range at recovery.
New research points to an easily measured eye response to light as a potentially useful way of diagnosing autism in very young children. Further testing is currently underway in a large cohort of ...
Measuring how the eyes' pupils change in response to light - known as the pupillary light reflex - could potentially be used to screen for autism in young children, according to a study conducted at ...
May 28, 2010 (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) — In an effort to find discrete phenotypic features that are consistently present in autistic populations, researchers at the University of Missouri Thompson ...
Zuber, B. L., Horrocks, A., Lorber, M., and Stark, L., QPR 73, 221, Res. Lab. Electronics, MIT (1964). Zuber, B. L., Michael, J. A., and Stark, L., QPR 73, 217, Res ...
An artificial vision sensor inspired by the human pupil adapts automatically to light, maintaining clear perception from darkness to glare and sharply improving recognition accuracy in machine ...
Experimenting with mice, neuroscientists report new evidence that the eye's iris in many lower mammals directly senses light and causes the pupil to constrict without involving the brain.
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