Characterizing the effect of aging on resting and event-evoked ocular response dynamics

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Characterizing the effect of aging on resting and event-evoked ocular response dynamics

Authors

Huviyetli, M.; Contadini-Wright, C.; Chait, M.

Abstract

Ocular measures are increasingly used as non-invasive proxies of cognitive processes such as attention and listening effort. However, their interpretation in aging populations is complicated by concurrent changes in ocular physiology and oculomotor control, raising a critical question: to what extent do age-related differences in these measures reflect cognitive rather than other physiological factors? Here, we dissociate these contributions by characterizing ocular dynamics (resting and event-evoked) during passive fixation in younger (N = 98, 18-35 years) and older adults (N = 71, 60+ years). Aging is associated with pronounced alterations in pupil dynamics, including reduced baseline variability and slower, attenuated responses to both auditory and visual events. In contrast, microsaccade dynamics did not correlate with aging. Across measures, ocular responses showed moderate-to-high within-subject stability across blocks, and factor analysis in the older cohort revealed separable components reflecting instantaneous pupil responsivity, sustained pupil responsivity, and microsaccade dynamics, with additional variance associated with sensory decline and age-related changes in pupil dynamics. Together, these findings demonstrate a clear dissociation: pupil-based metrics are strongly influenced by aging, whereas microsaccades remain comparatively stable across age groups. This dissociation provides a principled basis for interpreting ocular indices in aging research and highlights the need to account for baseline physiological differences when inferring cognitive processes from eye-based measures.

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