Data in Brief (Aug 2018)

Data on eye movements in people with glaucoma and peers with normal vision

  • Daniel S. Asfaw,
  • Pete R. Jones,
  • Nicholas D. Smith,
  • David P. Crabb

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
pp. 1266 – 1273

Abstract

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Eye movements of glaucoma patients have been shown to differ from age-similar control groups when performing everyday tasks, such as reading (Burton et al., 2012; Smith et al., 2014) [1,2], visual search (Smith et al., 2012) [3], face recognition (Glen et al., 2013) [4], driving, and viewing static images (Smith et al., 2012) [5]. Described here is the dataset from a recent publication in which we compared the eye-movements of 44 glaucoma patients and 32 age-similar controls, while they watched a series of short video clips taken from television programs (Crabb et al., 2018) [6]. Gaze was recorded at 1000 Hz using a remote eye-tracker. We also provide demographic information and results from a clinical examination of vision for each participant. Keywords: Eye movements, Scanpaths, Visual fields, Glaucoma, Eye tracking