Eye Tracking: Objective Assessment for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Youth Athletes (2020-2021)
This project team examined how head impact exposure may contribute to observable deficits in oculomotor response that can be tracked and used for diagnostic purposes. Building on the work of previous teams, team members assessed local youth athletes with an oculomotor assessment routine that includes reflexive (pro-saccades), anti-saccades and memory-guided saccades, and compare these data to in-season documentation of concussions and levels of impact/practice exposure.
Quantification of head impact exposure experienced by participants required the use of questionnaires and an earpiece sensor (DASHR) developed at Duke. The sample population included youth athletes from five years of age to the high school level.
This was be the sixth year of an ongoing longitudinal study. On a yearly basis, the team has observed a relatively low number of concussions within the study population. However, tracking and combining data on concussed individuals over multiple years will continue to strengthen the team’s ability to ascertain differences between concussed and non-concussed populations across multiple ages and levels of play.
Timing
Summer 2020 – Spring 2021
Team Outputs
Manuscript (in progress)
Conference presentation
Reflections
This Team in the News
The Test and the Tackle: A New Way to Measure Head Injury in Youth Football
Senior Spotlight: Reflections from the Class of 2021
What We’re Getting Out of Our Bass Connections Teams
Staying Close to Students Despite Distance
Senior Spotlight: Reflections from the Class of 2023
See related teams, Eye Tracking: Objective Assessment for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Youth Athletes (2021-2022) and Oculomotor Response as an Objective Assessment for Mild TBI in the Pediatric Population (2019-2020).
Image: Youth Football, by Jamie Williams, licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0