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SKERI Project Featured by the Psychonomic Society
October 27th, 2022
A recent publication from the Eye-Head Movement lab was spotlighted by the Psychonomic Society as Featured Content. In the original publication, the Authors designed and built an oculomotor simulator that would help test and improve mobile eye tracking in individuals with oculomotor deficits, such as those due to macular degeneration. The Researchers made their design freely available to others, should those in the research community want to build a similar device or make further developments for the existing one to include additional experimental requirements. The work was done by Anca Velisar, Al Lotze, Natela Shanidze, and Kassia Love – a SKERI Intern who initially joined the lab through the APSA VSRP summer internship program but ended up continuing in the lab and even winning funding for the Eye Robot project.
To read the feature on the Psychonomic Socety website, click here.
Publications
Projects
- Active
Challenges in Head-Free Eye Tracking in Health & Disease
This project is focused on investigating sources of error and potential improvement methodologies for head-free eye tracking, particularly in individuals with known oculomotor deficits
Labs
- Eye-Head Movement LaboratoryPrincipal Investigator:Our laboratory is interested in how changes in visual and/or vestibular function affect eye/head coordination, balance, and mobility, particularly in aging. We are currently pursuing two main lines of research:...

