Adaptive Control of Eye Movements: Clinical Implications
Richardson Lecture - Review Article
David S Zee

Abstract:
This paper is directed primarily to clinicians who diagnose
and treat patients with neurological disorders. It is an attempt
to illustrate that even with modern imaging technology and other
advances in laboratory testing, a thorough understanding of
neurophysiology and its anatomical substrate still plays an
important role in the diagnosis and management of patients with
neurological diseases. One area in neurophysiology in which
there has been great progress in the last few decades is the
ocular motor system. Particular interest has been focused on
the ways that the brain can adapt to lesions, and more specifically,
how the ocular motor system keeps itself calibrated in the face
of normal development and aging as well as in response to disease
and trauma. Since disorders of eye movements are such common
and often dramatic manifestations of neurological disease it
seems appropriate to bring some of the newer concepts in ocular
motor physiology to the "bedside".
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 177-184
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