Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task. / Gallicchio, Germano; Ryu, Donghyun; Krishnani, Mudit et al.
In: Psychophysiology, Vol. 61, No. 3, e14461, 03.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Gallicchio, G, Ryu, D, Krishnani, M, Tasker, G, Pecunioso, A & Jackson, R 2024, 'Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task', Psychophysiology, vol. 61, no. 3, e14461. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.14461

APA

Gallicchio, G., Ryu, D., Krishnani, M., Tasker, G., Pecunioso, A., & Jackson, R. (2024). Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task. Psychophysiology, 61(3), Article e14461. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.14461

CBE

Gallicchio G, Ryu D, Krishnani M, Tasker G, Pecunioso A, Jackson R. 2024. Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task. Psychophysiology. 61(3):Article e14461. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.14461

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Gallicchio G, Ryu D, Krishnani M, Tasker G, Pecunioso A, Jackson R. Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task. Psychophysiology. 2024 Mar;61(3):e14461. Epub 2023 Oct 19. doi: 10.1111/psyp.14461

Author

Gallicchio, Germano ; Ryu, Donghyun ; Krishnani, Mudit et al. / Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task. In: Psychophysiology. 2024 ; Vol. 61, No. 3.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Temporal and spectral electrooculographic features in a discrete precision task

AU - Gallicchio, Germano

AU - Ryu, Donghyun

AU - Krishnani, Mudit

AU - Tasker, Guy

AU - Pecunioso, Alessandra

AU - Jackson, Robin

PY - 2024/3

Y1 - 2024/3

N2 - This study aimed to evaluate the utility and applicability of electrooculography (EOG) when studying ocular activity during complex motor behavior. Due to its lower spatial resolution relative to eye tracking (ET), it is unclear whether EOG can provide valid and accurate temporal measurements such as the duration of the Quiet Eye (QE), that is the uninterrupted dwell time on the visual target prior to and during action. However, because of its greater temporal resolution, EOG is better suited for temporal-spectral decomposition, a technique that allows us to distinguish between lower and higher frequency activity as a function of time. Sixteen golfers of varying expertise (novices to experts) putted 60 balls to a 4-m distant target on a flat surface while we recorded EOG, ET, performance accuracy, and putter kinematics. Correlational and discrepancy analyses confirmed that EOG yielded valid and accurate QE measurements, but only when using certain processing parameters. Nested cross-validation indicated that, among a set of ET and EOG temporal and spectral oculomotor features, EOG power was the most useful when predicting performance accuracy through robust regression. Follow-up cross-validation and correlational analyses revealed that more accurate performance was preceded by diminished lower-frequency activity immediately before movement initiation and elevated higher-frequency activity during movement recorded from the horizontal channel. This higher-frequency activity was also found to accompany a smoother movement execution. This study validates EOG algorithms (code provided) for measuring temporal parameters and presents a novel approach to extracting temporal and spectral oculomotor features during complex motor behavior.

AB - This study aimed to evaluate the utility and applicability of electrooculography (EOG) when studying ocular activity during complex motor behavior. Due to its lower spatial resolution relative to eye tracking (ET), it is unclear whether EOG can provide valid and accurate temporal measurements such as the duration of the Quiet Eye (QE), that is the uninterrupted dwell time on the visual target prior to and during action. However, because of its greater temporal resolution, EOG is better suited for temporal-spectral decomposition, a technique that allows us to distinguish between lower and higher frequency activity as a function of time. Sixteen golfers of varying expertise (novices to experts) putted 60 balls to a 4-m distant target on a flat surface while we recorded EOG, ET, performance accuracy, and putter kinematics. Correlational and discrepancy analyses confirmed that EOG yielded valid and accurate QE measurements, but only when using certain processing parameters. Nested cross-validation indicated that, among a set of ET and EOG temporal and spectral oculomotor features, EOG power was the most useful when predicting performance accuracy through robust regression. Follow-up cross-validation and correlational analyses revealed that more accurate performance was preceded by diminished lower-frequency activity immediately before movement initiation and elevated higher-frequency activity during movement recorded from the horizontal channel. This higher-frequency activity was also found to accompany a smoother movement execution. This study validates EOG algorithms (code provided) for measuring temporal parameters and presents a novel approach to extracting temporal and spectral oculomotor features during complex motor behavior.

KW - Electrooculography (EOG)

KW - Eye Tracking (ET)

KW - Movement smoothness

KW - Nested cross-validation

KW - Quiet Eye (QE)

U2 - 10.1111/psyp.14461

DO - 10.1111/psyp.14461

M3 - Article

VL - 61

JO - Psychophysiology

JF - Psychophysiology

SN - 1469-8986

IS - 3

M1 - e14461

ER -