# Blink-induced changes in pupil dynamics are consistent and heritable

**Authors:** Şükrü Barış Demiral, Nora D. Volkow

PMC · DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4718613/v1 · Research Square · 2024-08-06

## TL;DR

The study shows that changes in pupil size after blinks are consistent and heritable, suggesting they are part of a genetically influenced oculomotor system.

## Contribution

The study introduces the concept of a Blink-Induced Pupillary Response (BIPR) as a heritable and consistent physiological phenomenon.

## Key findings

- BIPR shows consistent dilatory and constricting peaks that are reproducible across subjects and time points.
- BIPR has a heritable component with genetic and environmental factors influencing its structure.
- Pupil size, blink duration, and blink rate are highly heritable traits.

## Abstract

Pupil size and blink rates are heritable but the extent to which they interact with one another has not been properly investigated. Though changes in pupil size due to eye blinks have been reported, they are considered a pupillary artifact. In this study we used the HCP 7T fMRI dataset with resting state eye-tracking data obtained in monozygous and dizygous twins to assess their heritability and their interactions. For this purpose, we characterized the pupil dilation (positive peak) and constriction (negative peak) that followed blink events, which we describe as blink-induced pupillary response (BIPR). We show that the BIPR is highly consistent with a positive dilatory peak (D-peak) around 500ms and a negative constricting peak (C-peak) around 1s. These patterns were reproducible within- and between- subjects across two time points and differed by vigilance state (vigilant versus drowsy). By comparing BIPR between monozygous and dizygous twins we show that BIPR have a heritable component with significant additive genetic (A) and environmental (E) factors dominating the structural equation models, particularly in the time-domain for both D- and C-peaks and amplitude domain for the C-peak. (a2 between 42–49%). Blink duration, pupil size and blink rate were also found to be highly heritable (a2 up to 62% for pupil size). Our study documents an association between BIPR and wakefulness and indicates that BIPR should not be treated as a coincidental artefact, but part of a larger oculomotor system that we label here as Oculomotor Adaptive System, OAS, that is genetically determined.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Blink (MESH:D000092164), pupil dilation (MESH:D011681)

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11326410/full.md

## References

47 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11326410/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11326410