Changes in Eye Tracking Features Across Periods of Overpressure Exposure.
Hrishikesh M RaoSarah M McGuireElizabeth HalfordChristopher J SmaltPublished in: Military medicine (2023)
This study successfully demonstrated that eye tracking can be performed during training activities, such as explosive breaching, and that the modality may provide insight into neurophysiological change across periods of overpressure exposure. The results presented herein show that electrooculography-based eye tracking may be a useful method of assessing individualized physiological effects of overpressure exposure in the field. Future work is focused on time-dependent modeling to assess continuous changes in eye movements as this will enable building dose-response curves.
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