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      A influência da oculomotricidade e do reflexo-vestíbulo-ocular na leitura e escrita Translated title: The influence of eye movement and the vestibular-ocular reflex in reading and writing

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          Abstract

          OBJETIVO: verificar se alterações na oculomotricidade e no reflexo vestíbulo-ocular estão relacionados com a dificuldade de leitura e escrita. MÉTODOS : foram selecionados 18 sujeitos de ambos os gêneros, faixa etária entre nove e 14 anos de idade, com audição e acuidade visual estática dentro dos padrões de normalidade, sendo um grupo de 11 sujeitos com dificuldade de leitura e escrita e outro grupo controle composto por sete sujeitos sem a dificuldade. Os exames realizados foram avaliações da linguagem escrita, acuidade visual estática, acuidade visual dinâmica, audiológica e oculomotricidade. RESULTADOS : a acuidade visual estática, calibração, nistagmo espontâneo e semi - espontâneo apresentaram-se dentro da normalidade em toda população estudada. As provas de acuidade visual dinâmica e movimento sacádico apresentaram diferença estatisticamente significante (p<0,05) entre os grupos estudados, enquanto o movimento de rastreio apresentou alterações em ambos os grupos, não ocorrendo diferença estatística. CONCLUSÃO: alterações na oculomotricidade, assim como mal desempenho do reflexo vestíbulo-ocular mostrado na acuidade visual dinâmica podem estar interferindo na dificuldade do desenvolvimento da leitura e escrita.

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          Most cited references37

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          A New Tool for Investigating the Functional Testing of the VOR

          Peripheral vestibular function may be tested quantitatively, by measuring the gain of the angular vestibulo-ocular reflex (aVOR), or functionally, by assessing how well the aVOR performs with respect to its goal of stabilizing gaze in space and thus allow to acquire visual information during the head movement. In recent years, several groups have developed clinical and quantitative approaches to functional testing of the vestibular system based on the ability to identify an optotype briefly displayed on screen during head rotations. Although the proposed techniques differ in terms of the parameters controlling the testing paradigm, no study has thus far dealt with understanding the role of such choices in determining the effectiveness and reliability of the testing approach. Moreover, recent work has shown that peripheral vestibular patients may produce corrective saccades during the head movement (covert saccades), yet the role of these eye movements toward reading ability during head rotations is not yet understood. Finally, no study has thus far dealt with measuring the true performance of their experimental setups, which is nonetheless likely to be crucial information for understanding the effectiveness of functional testing approaches. Thus we propose a new software and hardware research tool allowing the combined measurement of eye and head movements, together with the timing of the optotype on screen, during functional testing of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) based on the Head Impulse Test. The goal of such tool is therefore that of allowing functional testing of the VOR while collecting the experimental data necessary to understand, for instance, (a) the effectiveness of the covert saccades strategy toward image stabilization, (b) which experimental parameters are crucial for optimizing the diagnostic power of the functional testing approach, and (c) which conditions lead to a successful reading or an error trial.
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            Cursive writing with smooth pursuit eye movements.

            The eyes never cease to move: ballistic saccades quickly turn the gaze toward peripheral targets, whereas smooth pursuit maintains moving targets on the fovea where visual acuity is best. Despite the oculomotor system being endowed with exquisite motor abilities, any attempt to generate smooth eye movements against a static background results in saccadic eye movements. Although exceptions to this rule have been reported, volitional control over smooth eye movements is at best rudimentary. Here, I introduce a novel, temporally modulated visual display, which, although static, sustains smooth eye movements in arbitrary directions. After brief training, participants gain volitional control over smooth pursuit eye movements and can generate digits, letters, words, or drawings at will. For persons deprived of limb movement, this offers a fast, creative, and personal means of linguistic and emotional expression. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              Distúrbios da aquisição da linguagem e da aprendizagem

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                rcefac
                Revista CEFAC
                Rev. CEFAC
                CEFAC Saúde e Educação (São Paulo )
                1982-0216
                December 2014
                : 16
                : 6
                : 1791-1797
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Universidade de São Paulo Brazil
                Article
                S1516-18462014000601791
                10.1590/1982-0216201419013
                b94da540-d603-4a21-84a9-d4f6b126a550

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=1516-1846&lng=en
                Categories
                REHABILITATION

                Physiotherapy
                Reading,Saccadic Movements,Visual Acuity,Writing,Leitura,Escrita,Movimentos Sacádicos,Acuidade Visual

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