Eye movements and eating disorders: protocol for an exploratory experimental study examining the relationship in young-adult women with subclinical symptomatology
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Eye movements and eating disorders: protocol for an exploratory experimental study examining the relationship in young-adult women with subclinical symptomatology
Citation:
Navas-León, S., Sánchez-Martín, M., Tajadura-Jiménez, A. et al. Eye movements and eating disorders: protocol for an exploratory experimental study examining the relationship in young-adult women with subclinical symptomatology. J Eat Disord 10, 47 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-022-00573-2
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
European Commission Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España) Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (España) Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Sponsor:
This publication is supported by the project grant “MAGIC outFIT” I+D+i /PID2019-105579RB-I00, funded by the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/, where AT and MS are Principal Investigators. SN is supported by the FPU program from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (FPU20/00089). LC acknowledges support from the CONEX-Plus programme funded by Universidad Carlos III de Madrid and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 801538
Project:
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/COFUND-GA-2017-801538 Internacional. 2019/0081 Gobierno de España. PID2019-105579RB-I00 Gobierno de España. FPU20/00089
Background: Recent research indicates that patients with anorexia (AN) show specific eye movement abnormalities such as shorter prosaccade latencies, more saccade inhibition errors, and increased rate of saccadic intrusions compared to participants without AN.Background: Recent research indicates that patients with anorexia (AN) show specific eye movement abnormalities such as shorter prosaccade latencies, more saccade inhibition errors, and increased rate of saccadic intrusions compared to participants without AN. However, it remains unknown whether these abnormal eye movement patterns, which may serve as potential biomarkers and endophenotypes for an early diagnosis and preventive clinical treatments, start to manifest also in people with subclinical eating disorders (ED) symptomatology. Therefore, we propose a protocol for an exploratory experimental study to investigate whether participants with subclinical ED symptomatology and control participants differ in their performance on several eye movement tasks.
Methods: The sample will be recruited through convenience sampling. The Eating Disorder examination Questionnaire will be administered as a screening tool to split the sample into participants with subclinical ED symptomatology and control participants. A fixation task, prosaccade/antisaccade task, and memory-guided task will be administered to both groups. Additionally, we will measure anxiety and premorbid intelligence as confounding variables.
Means comparison, exploratory Pearson's correlations and discriminant analysis will be performed.
Discussion: This study will be the first to elucidate the presence of specific eye movement abnormalities in participants with subclinical ED symptomatology. The results may open opportunities for developing novel diagnostic tools/therapies being helpful to the EDs research community and allied fields.[+][-]