Quantification of orienting responses can be used to differentiate between children with cerebral visual impairment and infantile nystagmus syndrome. To further improve the sensitivity of this method, we compared orienting responses to a Cartoon stimulus, which contains all sorts of visual information, to stimuli that contain only Contrast, Form coherence, Motion coherence, Color and Motion detection. The stimuli were shown on an eye tracker monitor using a preferential looking paradigm. We found that both groups of children showed general slowing in orienting responses compared to controls. The children with cerebral visual impairment had significantly prolonged responses to Cartoon compared to the children with nystagmus, whereas the children with nystagmus had prolonged responses to Motion detection and larger fixation areas. Previously reported differences in orienting responses to Cartoon were replicated. Application of specific visual information did not alter the sensitivity of the method to distinguish between children with visual processing deficits.

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doi.org/10.1177/0883073813511150, hdl.handle.net/1765/89305
Journal of Child Neurology
Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam

Pel, J., Kooiker, M., Van Der Does, J. M. E., Boot, F., de Faber, J. T. H. N., Van Der Steen-Kant, S. P., & van der Steen, H. (2014). Orienting responses to various visual stimuli in children with visual processing impairments or infantile nystagmus syndrome. Journal of Child Neurology, 29(12), 1632–1637. doi:10.1177/0883073813511150