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      Gaze Scanning at Street Crossings by Pedestrians With Homonymous Hemianopia With and Without Hemispatial Neglect

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          To investigate compensatory gaze-scanning behaviors during street crossings by pedestrians with homonymous hemianopia (HH) and hemispatial neglect (HSN).

          Methods

          Pedestrians with right homonymous hemianopia (RHH) and left homonymous hemianopia without (LHH) and with left spatial-neglect (LHSN) walked on city streets wearing a gaze-tracking system that also captured scene videos. Street-crossing instances were manually annotated, and horizontal gaze scan of magnitude ≥20° and scanning rates were compared within-subject, between the side of the hemifield loss (BlindSide) and the other side (SeeingSide). Proportion of instances with scans to both the left and the right side at nonsignalized crossings (indicative of safe scanning behavior) were compared among the three subject groups.

          Results

          Data from 19 participants (6 LHH, 7 RHH, and 6 with mild [4] or moderate [2] LHSN), consisting of 521 street-crossing instances of a total duration of 201 minutes and 5375 gaze scans, were analyzed. The overall gaze magnitude (mean [95% confidence interval (CI)]) was significantly larger toward the BlindSide (40.4° [39.1°–41.9°]) than the SeeingSide (36° [34.8°–37.3°]; P < 0.001). The scanning rate (mean [95% CI] scans/min) toward the BlindSide (14 [12.5–15.6]) was significantly higher than the SeeingSide (11.5 [10.3°–12.9°]; P < 0.001). The scanning rate in the LHSN group (10.7 [8.9–12.8]) was significantly lower than the LHH group (14 [11.6–17.0]; P = 0.045). The proportion of nonsignalized crossings with scans to both sides was significantly lower in LHSN (58%; P = 0.039) and RHH (51%; P = 0.003) than LHH (75%) participants.

          Conclusions

          All groups demonstrated compensatory scanning, making more gaze scans with larger magnitudes to the blind side. Mild to moderate LHSN adversely impacted the scanning rate.

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          Most cited references56

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          performance: An R Package for Assessment, Comparison and Testing of Statistical Models

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            glmmTMB balances speed and flexibility among packages for zero-inflated generalized linear mixed modeling

            Count data can be analyzed using generalized linear mixed models when observations are correlated in ways that require random effects. However, count data are often zero-inflated, containing more zeros than would be expected from the typical error distributions. We present a new package, glmmTMB, and compare it to other R packages that fit zero-inflated mixed models. The glmmTMB package fits many types of GLMMs and extensions, including models with continuously distributed responses, but here we focus on count responses. glmmTMB is faster than glmmADMB, MCMCglmm, and brms, and more flexible than INLA and mgcv for zero-inflated modeling. One unique feature of glmmTMB (among packages that fit zero-inflated mixed models) is its ability to estimate the Conway-Maxwell-Poisson distribution parameterized by the mean. Overall, its most appealing features for new users may be the combination of speed, flexibility, and its interface’s similarity to lme4. The R journal, 9 (2) ISSN:2073-4859
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              A short portable mental status questionnaire for the assessment of organic brain deficit in elderly patients.

              Clinicians whose practice includes elderly patients need a short, reliable instrument to detect the presence of intellectual impairment and to determine the degree. A 10-item Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire (SPMSQ), easily administered by any clinician in the office or in a hospital, has been designed, tested, standardized and validated. The standardization and validation procedure included administering the test to 997 elderly persons residing in the community, to 141 elderly persons referred for psychiatric and other health and social problems to a multipurpose clinic, and to 102 elderly persons living in institutions such as nursing homes, homes for the aged, or state mental hospitals. It was found that educational level and race had to be taken into account in scoring individual performance. On the basis of the large community population, standards of performance were established for: 1) intact mental functioning, 2) borderline or mild organic impairment, 3) definite but moderate organic impairment, and 4) severe organic impairment. In the 141 clinic patients, the SPMSQ scores were correlated with the clinical diagnoses. There was a high level of agreement between the clinical diagnosis of organic brain syndrome and the SPMSQ scores that indicated moderate or severe organic impairment.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
                Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
                IOVS
                Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science
                The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
                0146-0404
                1552-5783
                17 November 2023
                November 2023
                : 64
                : 14
                : 26
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Schepens Eye Research Institute of Mass Eye & Ear, Harvard Medical School Department of Ophthalmology, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
                [2 ]University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Central Western Massachusetts Veterans Affairs, Massachusetts, United States
                Author notes
                [# ]Correspondence: Shrinivas Pundlik, Harvard Medical School, Schepens Eye Research Institute of Mass Eye & Ear, 20 Staniford St., Boston, MA 02114, USA; shrinivas_pundlik@ 123456meei.harvard.edu .

                Current Affiliation: *EyeNexo LLC, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

                Article
                IOVS-23-37676
                10.1167/iovs.64.14.26
                10680492
                37975848
                0e5c474f-78ae-43c4-a61d-18195b9fbf5a
                Copyright 2023 The Authors

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 19 October 2023
                : 16 May 2023
                Page count
                Pages: 15
                Categories
                Low Vision
                Low Vision

                hemispatial neglect,naturalistic mobility,visual field loss,mobile gaze,homonymous hemianopia,stroke,brain injury

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