Empirical model of electro-oculogram
β Scribed by H. E. Kolder; P. Hochgesand
- Book ID
- 104644152
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 961 KB
- Volume
- 34
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-4486
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β¦ Synopsis
Electro-oculography is used as electrodiagnostic test in ophthalmology. The results show considerable variability. For this study a multivariate experiment was designed to help identifying independent variables contributing to the light peak to dark trough ratio and to test which response parameter carries the least variance. No sex difference was found for the peak to trough ratio.
Trough and peak potentials are highly correlated. The standard error of the peak to trough ratio is 0.17 or about 10)/o of the peak to trough ratio. Up to 71 percent of the variance can be accounted for when one light and dark phase of 12.5 minutes each is used. The empirical model is less precise in its predictive value than a formal model, which accounts for more than 90 percent of the variance.
Electro-oculography (EOG) is an electrodiagnostic technique useful for the diagnosis of some retinal degenerative disorders. The cornea is electropositive
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The electro-oculogram is variable as a clinical test, but the recording technique has not been standardized, and differences in the protocols for adaptation and stimulation among laboratories may contribute to the variability. To analyze some of these factors, we performed more than 100 electro-ocul
A method of automated measurement of the EOG amplitude is described. Its main advantages are as follows: 1. The mean of amplitudes, at a series of time dots within a single EOG deflection recorded with DC-amplification, are automatically measured and printed out. 2. Artifacts due to blinks, oversho