Paper
21 August 2009 Speckle interferometric sensor to measure low-amplitude high frequency Ocular Microtremor (OMT)
James P. Ryle, Mohammed Al-Kalbani, Unnikrishnan Gopinathan, Gerard Boyle, Davis Coakley, John T. Sheridan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Ocular microtremor (OMT) is a physiological high frequency (up to 150Hz) low amplitude (150-2500nm) involuntary tremor of the human eye. It is one of the three fixational ocular motions described by Adler and Fliegelman in 1934 as well as microsaccades and drift. Clinical OMT investigations to date have used eye-contacting piezoelectric probes or piezoelectric strain gauges. Before contact can be made, the eye must first be anaesthetised. In some cases, this induces eyelid spasms (blepharospasm) making it impossible to measure OMT. Using the contact probe method, the eye motion is mechanically damped. In addition to this, it is not possible to obtain exact information about the displacement. Results from clinical studies to date have given electrical signal amplitudes from the probe. Recent studies suggest a number of clinical applications for OMT, these include monitoring the depth of anaesthesia of a patient in surgery, prediction of outcome in coma, diagnosis of brainstem death. In addition to this, abnormal OMT frequency content is present in patients with neurological disorders such as Multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease. However for ongoing clinical investigations the contact probe method falls short of a non-contact accurate measurement solution. In this paper, we design a compact non contact phase modulating optical fiber speckle interferometer to measure eye motions. We present our calibration results using a calibrated piezoelectric vibration simulator. Digital signal processing is then performed to extract the low amplitude high frequency displacement information.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
James P. Ryle, Mohammed Al-Kalbani, Unnikrishnan Gopinathan, Gerard Boyle, Davis Coakley, and John T. Sheridan "Speckle interferometric sensor to measure low-amplitude high frequency Ocular Microtremor (OMT)", Proc. SPIE 7429, Novel Optical Systems Design and Optimization XII, 74290J (21 August 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.826891
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Eye

Speckle

Safety

Signal processing

Interferometers

Modulation

Motion measurement

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