Saccades track visual associative memory processes with precision and sensitivity
Simon Henin, Eden Tefera, Helen Borges, Orrin Devinsky, Charan Ranganath, Anli Liu

TL;DR
Eye movements can precisely track memory processes, revealing subtle memory impairments in epilepsy patients not detected by standard tests.
Contribution
Eye tracking provides a sensitive and precise method to detect memory variability in neuropsychiatric populations.
Findings
Correct memory retrieval correlates with fewer saccades and organized visual scanning.
Temporal lobe epilepsy patients show chaotic eye movement patterns during correct retrievals.
Eye tracking predicts retrieval accuracy better than standard cognitive tests.
Abstract
Humans primarily use vision to engage with and learn about the world. The hippocampus plays a crucial role in binding visual experiences of people, objects and contexts over time to create event memories. Thus, eye tracking could read out hippocampal dynamics in a precise and sensitive manner. Furthermore, eye tracking could potentially detect subjective memory decline reported by temporal lobe epilepsy patients that is missed by standardized cognitive testing. We asked whether eye movements could precisely and sensitively detect memory variability within trials and between subject cohorts. We predicted that (i) eye-tracking behaviour during visual retrieval could be validated against accuracy-based tests and that (ii) memory failures would be characterized by distinct spatiotemporal patterns of visual scanning. Fourteen healthy controls and 30 temporal lobe epilepsy patients…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMemory and Neural Mechanisms · Visual Attention and Saliency Detection · Memory Processes and Influences
