Background/Objectives: Due to their positions, professional baseball catchers are at elevated risk of concussion, which can impair visual processing. There is a need for sensitive sensorimotor monitoring tools to track concussion-related neurophysiological changes more accurately. We investigated whether oculometrics can address this need. Methods: Four Major League Baseball catchers completed an oculometric assessment shortly after suffering a concussion (Time 1) and again after completing vision rehabilitation (Time 2). The assessment produces 10 z-scored measures, including a summary score. Results: Players’ Time 1 summary score tended to be typical of a normal healthy adult (Mean = 0.07 z-scored units). On average, players improved by 1.3 z-score units from their Time 1 summary score (SD = 1.07). Exploratory analyses revealed that sensorimotor recovery was driven by smooth pursuit latency, proportion of tracking comprising smooth pursuit, and the amplitude of catch-up saccades. Conclusions: Our analysis was based on a very small sample of concussion cases, each of which was unique. Despite this limitation, our data show how oculometrics can measure improvements in visual processing following a concussion among baseball players with exceptional perceptual-motor skills. Our data highlight the risk that brain injuries in high-performing individuals go undetected due to standard-of-care tools normed to behavior from healthy control populations; for these athletes, “normal” scores cannot be interpreted as neurologically “healthy”.
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Richard Baird
United States Air Force Academy
Ryan Harrison
Laguna Research
Quinn Kennedy
Mountain View College
Brain Sciences
Naval Postgraduate School
United States Air Force Academy
Laguna Research
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Baird et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ccb63f16edfba7beb87dcf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci16040369
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