Patients who are otherwise completely unable to communicate can answer yes or no questions within seconds with the help of a simple system - consisting of just a laptop and camera - that measures nothing but the size of their pupils.
The tool takes advantage of changes in pupil size that naturally occur when people do mental arithmetic. It requires no specialised equipment or training at all, researchers said.
The new pupil response system might not only help those who are severely motor-impaired communicate, but might also be extended to assessing the mental state of patients whose state of consciousness is unclear, they said.
The researchers asked healthy people to solve a math problem only when the correct answer to a yes or no question was shown to them on a screen.
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The mental load associated with solving that problem caused an automatic increase in pupil size, which the researchers showed they could measure and translate into an accurate answer to questions like "Are you 20 years old?"
"We find it remarkable that the system worked almost perfectly in all healthy observers and then could be transferred directly from them to the patients, with no need for training or parameter adjustment," Einhauser said.
While the system could still use improvement in terms of speed and accuracy, those are technical hurdles Einhauser is confident they can readily overcome.
Their measures of pupil response could already make an important difference for those who need it most, researchers said.
The study was published in the journal Current Biology.