Our laboratory is interested in how changes in visual and/or vestibular function affect eye/head coordination, balance, and mobility, particularly in aging. We are currently pursuing two main lines of research: 1. The effects of central visual field loss on eye

Principal Investigator:
Natela ShanidzeThis project is focused on investigating sources of error and potential improvement methodologies for head-free eye tracking, particularly in individuals with known oculomotor deficits

This project is focused on investigating sources of error and potential improvement methodologies for head-free eye tracking, particularly in individuals with known oculomotor deficits
Publications
Journal Articles
Conference Papers
People
News
SKERI Project Featured by the Psychonomic Society
A recent publication from the Eye-Head Movement lab was spotlighted by the Psychonomic Society as Featured Content
Kassia Love Wins Best Paper Award at ETRA 2021’s ActivEye Workshop
Kassia Love won the best paper award at ETRA’s ActivEye Workshop for the paper “Eye, Robot: Calibration Challenges and Potential Solutions for Wearable Eye Tracking in Individuals with Eccentric Fixation”.
SKERI Intern awarded grant to build an eye movement simulator
Kassia Love (a SKERI virtual intern from Harvard University) received a Sigma Xi Grant-in-Aid of Research, in collaboration with SKERI researchers, Natela Shanidze and Anca Velisar, to build an eye movement simulation robot.