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Latent fixation nystagmus and nasotemporal asymmetries of motion visually evoked potentials in naturally strabismic primate
Lawrence Tychsen
, Ronald G. Boothe
Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences (ICTS)
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences
Division of Pediatric Clinical Practice
Research output
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Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
19
Scopus citations
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Dive into the research topics of 'Latent fixation nystagmus and nasotemporal asymmetries of motion visually evoked potentials in naturally strabismic primate'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Directed Motion
33%
Directional Bias
33%
Early Infancy
33%
Esotropia
33%
Eye Fixation
33%
Eye Motion
33%
Eye Movement Abnormalities
33%
Eye Movements
66%
Horizontal Motion
33%
Infantile Esotropia
66%
Latent Nystagmus
33%
Macaque
66%
Macaque Monkey
66%
Monkey
33%
Monocular Viewing
33%
Movement Artifact
33%
Naso-temporal Asymmetry
100%
Neural Mechanisms
33%
Nystagmus
100%
Primates
100%
Pursuit Eye Movements
33%
Slow Phase
33%
Stationery
33%
Strabismic
100%
Strabismus
33%
Visually Evoked Potential
100%
Neuroscience
Eye Movement
100%
Strabismus
25%
Visual Evoked Potential
100%
Visually Evoked Potential
75%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Convergent Strabismus
75%
Haplorhini
75%
Macaca
100%
Strabismus
25%