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Gold beads help image eye movements

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Imaging methods such as MRI cannot capture movements of much of the eye’s orbit — the cone-shaped bony cavity that protects the eye. Because the movements of the eye’s muscles and connective tissue are unknown, scientists do not fully understand how the brain moves the eyes. Joel M. Miller and colleagues from Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute in San Francisco implanted tiny gold beads (see figure) in the orbit of an anesthetized monkey to see if the beads could reliably tag orbital tissue and provide quality images of tissue movement over extended periods. As...Read full article

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    Published: June 2006
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