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IIT Gandhinagar : Scientists develop tool to identify dementia through eye movements

IIT Gandhinagar Scientists develop tool to identify dementia through eye movements

Scientists at IIT Gandhinagar have developed a technology to diagnose dementia by tracking a person’s eye movements, even before the symptoms appear. Neurodegenerative disorders are becoming a serious health issue with a significant rise in the ageing population. Though dementia can’t be cured, its progression can be delayed with early diagnosis.

 

“By the time symptoms of dementia are detected, it is too late — Alzheimer’s disease kicks in and it can’t be managed. But if dementia is caught early, we can delay the progression of Alzheimer’s,” said Uttama Lahiri, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering, at Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Gandhinagar.

 

Her team, which included Ritika Jain and Valay Patel, developed the ‘MindEye’ project that can track a person’s eye movement, quantifying gaze in terms of reaction time and correct fixations, in response to visual stimuli presented on a computer monitor.

 

“We present a stimulus — dots appearing at certain portions of the screen at certain angles. People with dementia often have issues with following the dot or fixing their gaze,” Lahiri told PTI.

 

Researchers can then map the eye movements in response to the stimulus. They can identify subtle patterns that predict whether a person suffers from mild cognitive impairment.

 

The preliminary results of the experimental study with 10 healthy participants were promising, Lahiri said.

 

“We have handed the technology over to the industry and a larger clinical trial is underway in Kolkata and Gujarat,” Lahiri said. This will completely change how dementia is seen as in the world.

 

About 1,600 people have been screened already, she added. Researchers used standard tests — long questionnaires that a patient answers with the help of a psychiatrist — to validate their results.

 

The results were presented this month at the Faculty of Old Age Psychiatry Annual Conference held in the UK.

 

Existing tests methods to diagnose dementia in patients have several shortcomings. During their research, Lahiri found that uneducated people in old age homes have difficulty answering the questionnaires, making it harder to give a correct diagnosis.

 

“That is where our system can take over and diagnose dementia. There is no screening tool yet that can detect dementia in such objective terms,” said Lahiri.

 

Courtesy: India today

 

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