Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03627962

Oculomotor Training and Chinese Characters Recognition in Children With Neuromuscular Disease

Using Gaze-directed Oculomotor Training (GDOMT) to Enhance Reading-related Oculomotor Skills and Chinese Characters Recognition CCR) for Children With Neuromuscular Disease (NMD)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
21 (actual)
Sponsor
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Years – 8 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of gaze-directed oculomotor training incorporated with web-based curriculum readings in Chinese to enhancing fixation, saccade and Chinese characters recognition in schoolchildren with neuromuscular disease associated with congenital oculomotor anomalies.

Detailed description

Background: schoolchildren with neuromuscular diseases associated with congenital oculomotor anomalies find problems in reading, even found difficulties in learning their mother-tongue language of Chinese. Objectives: (1) To test the hypothesis of using gaze-directed oculomotor training (GDOMT) incorporated with curriculum-based reading platform might enhance reading-related oculomotor skills and Chinese characters recognition; (2) To validate the outcome parameters of reading-related oculomotor skills by using remote eye tracker. Hypothesis: It has been shown that motor learning theory were effective in motor training for children with neuromuscular diseases. Oculomotor training to re-gain reading skills has been found effective for person with acquired brain injury or children with dyslexia, but there is no study on oculomotor training in children with neuromuscular diseases for reading. In this study, we hypothesize that self-initiated gaze-directed oculomotor training via e-reading platform (activated by horizontal saccade from left to right, then fixation dwell about 500ms to activate read-aloud the words phrases in Cantonese) for children with neuromuscular diseases associated with extra-ocular muscles anomalies, will be improved accuracy in fixation and saccade. Design: Cross-centers prospective Cohort study with quasi-experimental design; subjects of aged 6 to 8, randomly assigned into age-matched treatment group (N=10) or the age-matched control group (N=11). Methods: Participants (aged 6 to 8) with neuromuscular diseases, ocular health normal, normal intelligence, studying in main-stream special schools for children with physically disabilities were recruited. Participants passed the vision screening then randomized to age-paired matched control group (N=11) and treatment group (N=10). After time 1 measure, they attended reading class as usual. Therapists or teaching staff brought participants to library one by one and let the participant to read hardcopy or e-reading as assigned control or treatment group. Those therapists and teaching staff involved in training did not involve in repeated measures. Both groups explored to their curriculum-based reading materials. Participants of treatment group received oculomotor training by means of using a gaze-pointer interface to activate a reading e-platform, while control group used some ordinary hardcopy printout as placebo. Training sessions were provided twice per week for eight consecutive school calendar weeks. Occupational therapists and teachers collaborated in the reading class throughout 8 weeks. Participant in treatment group sat in front of the computer with the access hardware PCEye, gaze-directed oculomotor training was facilitated by decreasing the visual span from 20 to 10 to 5 degrees per words phrase. Teacher presented the web-based reading materials in hardcopies (placebo) to control group. Teacher pointed to the passages and read aloud to individual. Both treatment group and control group have same dosage of reading. Control group performed the Chinese characters recognition test by gesture or verbal responses to the printout of web-based materials, while treatment group used gaze-access to select the answers same as Developmental Eye Movement Sub-test C.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERgaze-directed oculomotor trainingDevice: Tobii PCEye Protocol: Visual span was calculated by the distance between human-computer and dpi of fonts. Pointer speed was programmed 120pixels (5 degrees)/1sec for image drift of reading. Dosage: 1) gaze-access required 20 to 10 degrees per fixation to activate text-to-speech (TTS) read-aloud function; about 30 repetitions of saccade and fixation. 2\) gaze-directed OMT limited to 10-5 degrees. Chinese characters recognition in multiple choice format, about 60 repetitions. Target behavior - gaze-directed access by Tobii PCEye: reading from left to right (=horizontal mouse mover); read-aloud function by gaze dwell \> 500ms. To enhance purposeful and repetitive eye movement. Frequency: 2 session/wk x 8 wks Duration: 30 min/session

Timeline

Start date
2016-11-01
Primary completion
2017-04-30
Completion
2018-08-08
First posted
2018-08-14
Last updated
2018-08-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Hong Kong

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03627962. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.