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Conditioned Eyelid Movement Is not a Blink
Author(s) -
Alice Schade Powers,
P.S. Coburn-Litvak,
Craig Evinger
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of neurophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.302
H-Index - 245
eISSN - 1522-1598
pISSN - 0022-3077
DOI - 10.1152/jn.00631.2009
Subject(s) - eyelid , corneal reflex , saccadic masking , psychology , reflex , eye movement , orbicularis oculi muscle , audiology , gaze , blepharospasm , stimulus (psychology) , kinematics , supraorbital nerve , neuroscience , medicine , physics , dystonia , ophthalmology , cognitive psychology , classical mechanics , psychoanalysis
Based on kinematic properties and distinct substrates, there are different classes of eyelid movement described as eyeblinks. We investigate whether the eyelid movements made in response to a conditioned stimulus (CS) are a category of eyelid movements distinct from blinks. Human subjects received 60 trials of classical eyelid conditioning with a tone as the CS and electrical stimulation of the supraorbital branch of the trigeminal nerve as the unconditioned stimulus (UCS). Before and after training, reflex blinks were elicited with the UCS. The kinematics of conditioned responses (CRs) differed significantly from those of reflex blinks. The slope of the amplitude-maximum velocity function was steeper for reflex blinks than for CRs, and reflex blink duration was significantly shorter than CR duration. Unlike reflex blinks, for which maximum velocity was independent of blink duration, the maximum velocity of CRs depended on CR duration. These quantitative and qualitative differences indicated that CRs were a unique class of eyelid movements distinct from blinks and eyelid movements with vertical saccadic gaze shifts.

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