By observing the eye movements of schizophrenia patients while playing a simple video game, a University of British Columbia researcher has discovered a potential explanation for some of their symptoms, including difficulty with everyday tasks.
The schizophrenia patients, along with a control group, were asked to predict the trajectory of a small dot that appeared briefly on a monitor as it moved toward a vertical line. As an infrared-equipped video camera tracked their eye movements, participants would call out whether it would hit or miss the line.
Schizophrenia, a brain disorder affecting about 1 per cent of the population, often causes people to hear voices that others don’t hear or see things that others don’t see. They can also be incoherent when talking, or may sit quietly for hours without moving or talking. People with schizophrenia often have poor motion perception and eye movements, leading them to bump into people while walking or making it a challenge to cross a street. They often cannot perform even simple tasks like preparing a shopping list or reading a transportation map.
The schizophrenia patients performed significantly worse than the control group in predicting hits and misses, and they were also not as good at tracking the dot with their eyes. But the impairment of their eye movements was not severe enough to explain the difference in their predictive performance, according to the results published last week in the Journal of Neuroscience. So there was some kind of breakdown in their ability to interpret what they saw.
Internal validation
Lead author Miriam Spering, an Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, says the patients were having trouble generating or using an “efference copy” – a signal sent from the eye movement system in the brain indicating how much, and in what direction, their eyes have moved. The efference copy helps validate visual information from the eyes.
“An impaired ability to generate or interpret efference copies means the brain cannot correct an incomplete perception,” says Dr. Spering, who conducted the dot-tracking experiments as a postdoctoral fellow at New York University, and is now conducting similar studies at UBC. The brain might fill in the blanks by extrapolating from prior experience, contributing to psychotic symptoms, such as hallucinations.
“But just as a person might, through practice, improve their ability to predict the trajectory of a moving dot, a person might be able to improve their ability to generate or use that efference copy,” Dr. Spering says. “My vision would be a mobile device that patients could use to practice that skill, so they could more easily do common tasks that involve motion perception, such as walking along a crowded sidewalk.”
Parkinson’s patients, baseball players
Dr. Spering is now conducting the same experiment on people with Parkinson’s disease, a movement disorder caused by the lack of the brain chemical dopamine. In addition to muscle tremor and stiffness, Parkinson’s patients have poor visual perception and impaired eye movements. Dr. Spering is trying to see if the two are connected; if so, eye-movement exercises might improve vision in Parkinson’s patients.
Dr. Spering also is working with UBC baseball head coach Terry McKaig, who sought out her expertise in visual neuroscience to improve his team’s hitting. She will soon begin testing the players’ eye movements while they hit balls in a batting cage.
“Coach McKaig is extremely interested in the science, and excited about the possibility to include vision training into the team’s daily routine,” she says. “We are using a highly scientific approach to first understand the mechanisms that could lead to improvements, and then using our knowledge to enhance performance in the field.”