1. It is shown, by an investigation of the movements of blinking in the normal individual, that the distribution of interblink periods (intervals between successive blinks measured in seconds) is remarkably constant for the individual under constant experimental conditions. 2 The movements are not reflex, and do not depend on the integrity of the second, third, fourth, fifth, or sixth cranial nerves. They are centrally controlled, and dependent on intermittent impulses passing from the region of the basal ganglia. 3. The rate of blinking is closely related to the “mental tension” of the subject at the time, and in all probability the movements constitute a kind of relief mechanism, whereby nervous energy, otherwise unutilised, passes into a highly facilitated path. © 1927 The Physiological Society
CITATION STYLE
Ponder, E., & Kennedy, W. P. (1927). ON THE ACT OF BLINKING. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology, 18(2), 89–110. https://doi.org/10.1113/expphysiol.1927.sp000433
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