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Dive into the research topics where J.N. van der Geest is active.

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Featured researches published by J.N. van der Geest.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 1992

Monodisperse Colloidal Silica Spheres from Tetraalkoxysilanes: Particle Formation and Growth Mechanism

A. van Blaaderen; J.N. van der Geest; A. Vrij

The mechanisms behind the formation and growth of silica particles prepared from tetraalkoxysilanes in alcoholic solutions of water and ammonia were investigated. By analyzing the competitive growth of a dispersion of silica spheres with a bimodal size distribution, it was established that the growth proceeds through a surface reaction-limited condensation of hydrolyzed monomers or small oligomers. By following the hydrolysis of tetraethoxysilane with 13C liquid NMR and the particle growth with time-resolved static light scattering, it was found that both processes were described by the same first-order rate constants. Therefore, despite the fact that the incorporation of hydrolyzed monomers proceeds through a reactionlimited process, the overall rate of the particle growth is limited by the first-order hydrolysis rate of the alkoxide. It was concluded that the particle formation (or particle nucleation) proceeds through an aggregation process of siloxane substructures that is influenced strongly by the surface potential of the silica particles and the ionic strength of the reaction medium. These conclusions were based on the dependence of the particle stability and final particle size on additions of LiN03 to the reaction and dispersion medium and the independence of the growth rate on the same additions. 0 1992


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2002

Gaze behavior of children with pervasive developmental disorder toward human faces: a fixation time study.

J.N. van der Geest; Chantal Kemner; Marinus N. Verbaten; H. van Engeland

BACKGROUND The abnormal gaze behavior of autistic children toward human faces, as observed in daily-life situations, are investigated in two fixation time studies. It has been argued that faces are a special kind of stimuli for normal individuals and that this might not be the case for autistic children. METHODS A group of high-functioning autistic children (including a group of sub-threshold PDD-NOS children) was compared with a group of normal children, with respect to their fixation behavior for photographs of human faces. Using an infrared eye-tracking device, fixation times for the whole face and for the facial elements of faces were compared between the two groups. The first study dealt with faces having an emotional expression. The second study dealt with neutral faces presented either upright or upside-down. RESULTS Results of the two studies showed that autistic children have the same fixation behavior as normal children for upright faces, with or without an emotional expression. Furthermore, results of the second study showed that normal children spent less time looking at upside-down faces, but that the fixation times of autistic children were not influenced by the orientation of the faces. CONCLUSIONS These results plead against the notion that the abnormal gaze behavior in everyday life is due to the presence of facial stimuli per se. Furthermore, the absence of a face orientation effect in autistic children might be a reflection of a lack of holistic processing of human faces in autism.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2002

Recording eye movements with video-oculography and scleral search coils: a direct comparison of two methods

J.N. van der Geest; Maarten A. Frens

A video-based 2D eye-tracking system (EyeLink version 2.04, SR Research Ltd/SMI) was compared with the scleral search coil technique for its performance on recording the properties of fixations and saccadic eye movements. Fixation positions and saccadic properties (amplitude, duration, and peak velocity) were calculated independently from the data of the two systems that recorded eye positions simultaneously. Fixation positions were well correlated between the video and the coil output with an average discrepancy of <1 degree over a tested range of 40 by 40 degree of visual angle. With respect to the saccade analysis, the values measured by the video system were fitted as a linear function of the values measured by the coil system. Highly correlated linear fits with slopes near one were obtained for all the saccadic parameters. Main sequence relationships (amplitudes-duration and amplitude-peak velocity) were also similar for both systems. A disadvantage of the video method is its low sample rate of 250 Hz. The relatively noisier estimate of all parameters of small saccades could be attributed to this low sampling frequency.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2002

Looking at Images with Human Figures: Comparison Between Autistic and Normal Children

J.N. van der Geest; Chantal Kemner; Gert Camfferman; Marinus N. Verbaten; H. van Engeland

Based on clinical observations of abnormal gaze behavior of autistic children, it has been suggested that autistic children have a problem in processing social information. Several studies on eye movements have indeed found indications that children with autism show particularly abnormal gaze behavior in relation to social stimuli. However, the methodology used in such investigations did not allow for precise gaze analysis. In the present study, the looking behavior of autistic children toward cartoon-like scenes that included a human figure was measured quantitatively using an infrared eye-tracking device. Fixation behavior of autistic children was similar to that of their age- and IQ-matched normal peers. These results do not support the notion that autistic children have a specific problem in processing socially loaded visual stimuli. Also, there is no indication for an abnormality in gaze behavior in relation to neutral objects. It is suggested that the often-reported abnormal use of gaze in everyday life is not related to the nature of the visual stimuli but that other factors, like social interaction, may play a decisive role.


Gait & Posture | 2013

Gait patterns in a community-dwelling population aged 50 years and older

Vincentius J.A. Verlinden; J.N. van der Geest; Yoo Young Hoogendam; Albert Hofman; Monique M.B. Breteler; Mohammad Arfan Ikram

Poor gait is an important risk factor for falls and associated with higher morbidity and mortality. It is well established that older age is associated with worse gait, but it remains unclear at what age this association is first seen. Moreover, previous studies focused mainly on normal walking, but gait also encompasses turning and tandem walking. In a large study of community-dwelling middle-aged and elderly persons we investigated the association of age with gait, focusing on normal walking, turning and tandem walking. In 1500 persons aged 50 years and over, we measured gait using an electronic walkway. Participants performed normal walks, turning and a tandem walk. With principal components analysis of 30 variables we summarized gait into five known gait factors: Rhythm, Variability, Phases, Pace and Base of Support; and uncovered two novel gait factors: Tandem and Turning. The strongest associations with age were found for Variability (difference in Z-score -0.29 per 10 years increase (95% confidence interval: -0.34; -0.24)), Phases (-0.31 per 10 years (-0.36; -0.27)) and Tandem (-0.25 per 10 years (-0.30; -0.20)). Additionally, these factors already showed association with the youngest age groups, from 55 to 60 years of age and older. Our study shows that Variability, Phases and Tandem have the strongest association with age and are the earliest to demonstrate a poorer gait pattern with higher age. Future research should further investigate how these gait factors relate with gait-related diseases in their earliest stages.


The Journal of Physiology | 2003

Compensatory increase of the cervico-ocular reflex with age in healthy humans

W.P.A. Kelders; Gert-Jan Kleinrensink; J.N. van der Geest; L. Feenstra; C. I. De Zeeuw; Maarten A. Frens

The cervico‐ocular reflex (COR) is an ocular stabilization reflex that is elicited by rotation of the neck. It works in conjunction with the vestibulo‐ocular reflex (VOR) and the optokinetic reflex (OKR) in order to prevent visual slip over the retina due to self‐motion. The gains of the VOR and OKR are known to decrease with age. We have investigated whether the COR, a reflexive eye movement elicited by rotation of the neck, shows a compensatory increase and whether a synergy exists between the COR and the other ocular stabilization reflexes. In the present study 35 healthy subjects of varying age (20–86 years) were rotated in the dark in a trunk‐to‐head manner (the head fixed in spaced with the body passively rotated under it) at peak velocities between 2.1 and 12.6 deg s−1 as a COR stimulus. Another 15 were subjected to COR, VOR and OKR stimuli at frequencies between 0.04 and 0.1 Hz. Three subjects participated in both tests. The position of the eyes was recorded with an infrared recording technique. We found that the COR‐gain increases with increasing age and that there is a significant covariation between the gains of the VOR and COR, meaning that when VOR increases, COR decreases and vice versa. A nearly constant phase lag between the COR and the VOR of about 25 deg existed at all stimulus frequencies.


Neuropsychologia | 2004

Saccade dysmetria in Williams-Beuren syndrome

J.N. van der Geest; G.C. Lagers-van Haselen; J.M. van Hagen; L.C.P. Govaerts; I.F.M. de Coo; C. I. De Zeeuw; Maarten A. Frens

Numerous studies have described the poor visuo-spatial processing capacities of subjects with Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS), a genetically based developmental disorder. Since visual perception and eye movements are closely related we hypothesized that the poor visuo-spatial processing capacities of subjects with WBS might be related to a poor saccadic control. Thereto, we recorded horizontal and vertical saccadic eye movements to targets using infrared video-oculography in 27 subjects with WBS and eight healthy controls. In the WBS group saccadic gains were highly variable, both between and within individual subjects, and they often needed more than one correction saccade to reach the target. Ten (out of a subgroup of 22) WBS subjects showed a large number of hypometric and/or hypermetric saccades, and, also a left-right asymmetry in saccadic gains was observed in WBS. We conclude that the observed impairments in saccadic control are likely to affect the proper processing of visuo-spatial information.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2005

Increased prevalences of left-handedness and left-eye sighting dominance in individuals with Williams-Beuren syndrome.

J.W. Van Strien; G.C. Lagers-van Haselen; J.M. van Hagen; I.F.M. de Coo; Maarten A. Frens; J.N. van der Geest

Handedness and eye sighting dominance were assessed in a sample of 50 individuals (25 male, 25 female; aged 5–38 years) with Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS). The prevalences of left-handedness and left-eyedness were compared to the normative prevalences in the general population. We found significantly higher prevalences of left-handedness and left-eyedness in the WBS sample. The higher prevalences were more salient in younger than in older individuals and in male than in female individuals. We suggest that the increased prevalence of left-handedness in WBS is a consequence of a slower maturation rate, which allows deviation from a predetermined laterality pattern. The authors are grateful to the patients with Williams-Beuren Syndrome and their families for participating in this study. M.A. Frens was supported by NWO-VIDI. J.N. van der Geest was supported by grants from NWO (903-68-394) and the Revolving Fund of the Erasmus MC.


Journal of Neural Transmission | 2004

In search of neurophysiological markers of pervasive developmental disorders: smooth pursuit eye movements?

Chantal Kemner; J.N. van der Geest; Marinus N. Verbaten; H. van Engeland

Summary.Genetic studies of autism would benefit from the identification of (neurophysiological) markers of the disease. Reports that subjects with autism suffer from abnormalities of visual motor processing, indicate that abnormalities in smooth pursuit eye movements (SPEM) may be a marker of the disorder. Sixteen high-functioning school-aged children with pervasive developmental disorder (PDD) were compared with a matched group of eighteen normally developing controls on performance of a SPEM task and a task which tested the integrity of visually guided saccadic eye movements. Both groups of children had normal eye movements during performance of these tasks. Thus abnormalities in SPEM would appear not to be a marker of PDD. The earlier reported abnormalities in visual motion processing might need to be reinterpreted.


Experimental Brain Research | 2005

Visual depth processing in Williams–Beuren syndrome

J.N. van der Geest; G.C. Lagers-van Haselen; J.M. van Hagen; Eli Brenner; L.C.P. Govaerts; I.F.M. de Coo; Maarten A. Frens

Patients with Williams–Beuren Syndrome (WBS, also known as Williams Syndrome) show many problems in motor activities requiring visuo-motor integration, such as walking stairs. We tested to what extent these problems might be related to a deficit in the perception of visual depth or to problems in using this information in guiding movements. Monocular and binocular visual depth perception was tested in 33 patients with WBS. Furthermore, hand movements to a target were recorded in conditions with and without visual feedback of the position of the hand. The WBS group was compared to a group of control subjects. The WBS patients were able to perceive monocular depth cues that require global processing, but about 49% failed to show stereopsis. On average, patients with WBS moved their hand too far when no visual feedback on hand position was given. This was not so when they could see their hand. Patients with WBS are able to derive depth from complex spatial relationships between objects. However, they seem to be impaired in using depth information for guiding their movements when deprived of visual feedback. We conclude that the problems that WBS patients have with tasks such as descending stairs are not due to an inability to judge distance.

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Maarten A. Frens

Erasmus University College

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C. I. De Zeeuw

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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A. van der Lugt

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Gert-Jan Kleinrensink

Erasmus University Medical Center

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I.F.M. de Coo

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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J.M. van Hagen

VU University Medical Center

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L.C.P. Govaerts

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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