Human eye movements associated with blinks and prolonged eyelid closure. 1985

H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman

Eye movements associated with eyelid closure were recorded in human subjects with search coils, embedded in self-adhering scleral annuli, in a magnetic field. In contrast to classical notions, voluntary as well as reflex blinks were consistently accompanied by transient downward and nasalward movements of both eyes with amplitudes 1-5 degrees. These eye movements had a shorter duration than the upper lid movements, and the shapes of the spatial trajectories of eye and lid movements were not similar. The trajectory of the eye movements was only modestly affected by gaze eccentricities up to 15 degrees; there was a tendency for the downward component to be enhanced by looking upward, and vice versa. Restraining of the lids of one eye in the open or closed position did not significantly alter the eye movements during (attempted) blinks. Velocity-amplitude-duration relations of the down- and upward components were similar for the same eye before and after closure and for the closed eye and the contralateral unrestrained eye. The velocity-amplitude-duration characteristics of saccades were also unaffected by prolonged closure of the lids of one eye. Prolonged, voluntary closure of the lids was followed by a slow, tonic ocular deviation, which was consistently upward in half of the subjects and consistently downward in the other half. Additional horizontal components were highly variable even within subjects. In one subject the downward deviation was converted into upward deviation when lid closure was mechanically impeded. We conclude that elevation of the eye ball (Bell's phenomenon) does not occur during short blinks and only in about half of the subjects during voluntary unrestrained prolonged lid closure. Our evidence does not support the possibility that the transient eye movements during blinks are caused primarily by a mechanical interaction between the lids and the eye (or the scleral annulus). More likely, they are a secondary effect of an active cocontraction of extraocular muscles that primarily results in retraction of the eye.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D009801 Oculomotor Muscles The muscles that move the eye. Included in this group are the medial rectus, lateral rectus, superior rectus, inferior rectus, inferior oblique, superior oblique, musculus orbitalis, and levator palpebrae superioris. Extraocular Muscles,Extraocular Rectus Muscles,Inferior Oblique Extraocular Muscle,Inferior Oblique Muscles,Levator Palpebrae Superioris,Musculus Orbitalis,Oblique Extraocular Muscles,Oblique Muscle, Inferior,Oblique Muscle, Superior,Oblique Muscles, Extraocular,Rectus Muscles, Extraocular,Superior Oblique Extraocular Muscle,Superior Oblique Muscle,Extraocular Muscle,Extraocular Muscle, Oblique,Extraocular Muscles, Oblique,Extraocular Oblique Muscle,Extraocular Oblique Muscles,Extraocular Rectus Muscle,Inferior Oblique Muscle,Muscle, Oculomotor,Muscles, Oculomotor,Oblique Extraocular Muscle,Oblique Muscle, Extraocular,Oblique Muscles, Inferior,Oblique Muscles, Superior,Oculomotor Muscle,Rectus Muscle, Extraocular,Superior Oblique Muscles
D001767 Blinking Brief closing of the eyelids by involuntary normal periodic closing, as a protective measure, or by voluntary action. Orbicularis Oculi Reflex,Reflex, Blink,Reflex, Corneal,Reflex, Orbicularis Oculi,Winking,Blink Reflexes,Corneal Reflexes,Orbicularis Oculi Reflexes,Blink Reflex,Reflexes, Blink,Reflexes, Orbicularis Oculi
D005133 Eye Movements Voluntary or reflex-controlled movements of the eye. Eye Movement,Movement, Eye,Movements, Eye
D005143 Eyelids Each of the upper and lower folds of SKIN which cover the EYE when closed. Eyelid
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000328 Adult A person having attained full growth or maturity. Adults are of 19 through 44 years of age. For a person between 19 and 24 years of age, YOUNG ADULT is available. Adults
D012438 Saccades An abrupt voluntary shift in ocular fixation from one point to another, as occurs in reading. Pursuit, Saccadic,Saccadic Eye Movements,Eye Movement, Saccadic,Eye Movements, Saccadic,Movement, Saccadic Eye,Movements, Saccadic Eye,Pursuits, Saccadic,Saccade,Saccadic Eye Movement,Saccadic Pursuit,Saccadic Pursuits

Related Publications

H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
April 2005, Clinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
March 2008, Chaos (Woodbury, N.Y.),
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
July 1991, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
January 1979, ORL; journal for oto-rhino-laryngology and its related specialties,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
December 1991, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
January 1979, ORL; journal for oto-rhino-laryngology and its related specialties,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
September 1989, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
December 2014, The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
November 2020, Journal of neurology,
H Collewijn, and J van der Steen, and R M Steinman
July 2005, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine,
Copied contents to your clipboard!