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Study details
Enrolling now

Use of Eye Tracking to Aid in Autism Risk Detection

Indiana University
NCT IDNCT06471504ClinicalTrials.gov data as of Apr 2026
Target enrollment

100

Study length

about 1.3 years

Ages

1–4

Locations

1 site in IN

About this study

Researchers are testing if eye tracking can help identify children at higher risk for autism. The trial will use a non-invasive eye-tracking system to collect data on eye movements and pupil size from children aged 12 to 48 months. This information may help determine whether these measures are useful in identifying autism risk.

Based on ClinicalTrials.gov records.

What participants do

  • 1.Eyelink Portable Duo
Primary goalAgreement between eye-tracking biomarker score and diagnosis

Participation effort

Estimated from trial records. Details can vary by site.

Time + visits
Low4%
Logistics
Moderate50%

Logistics difficulty varies by site location and availability.

Trial highlights

Treatment details

Auto-extracted from trial records to preview treatments and outcomes.

Endpoints

Primary: Agreement between eye-tracking biomarker score and diagnosis