Eye tracking may help differentiate children with, without autism spectrum disorder

PHILADELPHIA — Tracking to chart various eye movements including saccadic and fixation may be effective in differentiating neurological differences between children with ASD and neurotypical children, according to a poster presentation.
“Children with autism often have different eye movements than neurotypical children, they might have different fixation patterns, pupil dilations, saccadic eye movements,” Blake S. Lockard, BS, of the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine at Nova Southeastern University in Florida, told Healio at the American Neurological