Introduction <p>Across two studies, we investigated whether global eye movement similarity reflects visuospatial memory impairment in older adults, aiming to identify a novel neuropsychological marker of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).</p> Methods <p>In Study 1, 35 participants completed a global eye movement similarity memory (GEMS-M) task, viewing indoor scene images with three objects and identifying changes during the recognition phase. In Study 2, 60 participants (30 healthy controls, 30 with MCI) completed a passive version of the task without explicit memory judgment.</p> Results <p>Study 1 showed that the similarity of global eye movement patterns between encoding and recognition phases predicted memory performance, particularly when an object was added. Study 2 demonstrated that global eye movement similarity, combined with demographics, discriminated MCI patients from healthy controls with an AUC of 0.93.</p> Discussion <p>Our findings suggest that global eye movement similarity may serve as a promising tool for the early detection of MCI.</p> Graphical Abstract <p></p>

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Tracking the eyes to track decline: Global eye movement similarity as a novel neuropsychological marker of mild cognitive impairment

  • Zhan Wang,
  • Hong-Zhou Xu,
  • Fang Fang,
  • Xue-Rui Peng,
  • Ying-Chen Liu,
  • Zhi-Jun Zhan,
  • Jing Yu

摘要

Introduction

Across two studies, we investigated whether global eye movement similarity reflects visuospatial memory impairment in older adults, aiming to identify a novel neuropsychological marker of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

Methods

In Study 1, 35 participants completed a global eye movement similarity memory (GEMS-M) task, viewing indoor scene images with three objects and identifying changes during the recognition phase. In Study 2, 60 participants (30 healthy controls, 30 with MCI) completed a passive version of the task without explicit memory judgment.

Results

Study 1 showed that the similarity of global eye movement patterns between encoding and recognition phases predicted memory performance, particularly when an object was added. Study 2 demonstrated that global eye movement similarity, combined with demographics, discriminated MCI patients from healthy controls with an AUC of 0.93.

Discussion

Our findings suggest that global eye movement similarity may serve as a promising tool for the early detection of MCI.

Graphical Abstract