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Photo of Jason Rubinstein smiling, standing on Fillmore Street on a sunny day

Jason Rubinstein

Postdoctoral Fellow

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Verghese Lab

Our laboratory studies the mechanisms of healthy vision and action, as well as the basis of attention and visual adaptation in clinical populations.

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Modeling Smooth Pursuit Eye-Movement Deficits in Macular Degeneration

The project investigates the deficits in smooth pursuit in individuals with age-related macular degeneration within the framework of a Bayesian model.

Active

Tracking a target in depth with central field loss

Bilateral field loss due to maculopathy creates a scotoma that extends in depth — a volume scotoma. Morevoer the size of the scotoma depends on whether observers turn their eyes to track a target as it comes closer. This project investigates how the volume scotoma affects the ability to track oncoming targets in these individuals, and in controls with a simulated volume scotoma.

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Characteristics of Smooth Pursuit in Individuals with Central Field Loss

This project investigates the properties of smooth pursuit eye movements in individuals with macular degeneration. Commonly believed to be a fovea-linked eye movement, smooth pursuit has not been previously investigated in individuals with central field loss, despite its importance for tracking moving objects, such as vehicles or pedestrians on a busy street.

Mentorship Period
January 2020 - July 2022
Mentors
  • Preeti Verghese

I am a postdoctoral fellow working under the supervision of Dr. Preeti Verghese. My work at Smith-Kettlewell will focus on individuals with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) across two projects, investigating (1) the implications of central vision loss on information-gathering in visual displays and (2) the adjustments to smooth pursuit and motion perception in depth resulting from a binocular volume scotoma using virtual reality.

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