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Characteristics of anisometropic suppression: Simple reaction time measurements

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TLDR
The characteristics of artificially induced anisometropic suppression and temporal summation were investigated in observers with normal and abnormal binocular vision by using a simple reaction time paradigm, and shape invariance was shown to be shape-invariant for all conditions examined.
Abstract
The characteristics of artificially induced anisometropic suppression were investigated in observers with normal and abnormal binocular vision (anisometropic amblyopia) by using a simple reaction time paradigm. Reaction time was measured as a function of stimulus intensity for various stimulus durations. For all conditions, the reaction time increased as stimulus intensity decreased toward threshold. We found that traditional techniques for modeling this trend were inadequate, so we developed a simple visuogram method for comparing these functions. Using this technique, reaction time versus intensity functions are shown to be shape-invariant for all conditions examined. This means that, although reaction times are longer during induced anisometropic suppression or in anisometropic amblyopia, they are the same if contrast is normalized to equate threshold. The shape-invariant nature of these functions is also consistent with the notion that a single mechanism mediates detection under these conditions. Temporal summation was investigated at both threshold (method of limits) and suprathreshold (criterion reaction time) levels. Again, because of shape invariance, the suprathreshold results mirror the threshold results. The critical duration (the duration at the intersection of the complete summation and zero summation regions) is not affected by any of the conditions. However, the critical intensity (the intensity for the zero summation region) is higher for the amblyopic eyes, as compared with the normal or nonamblyopic eyes. Induced anisometropic suppression always increases the critical intensity, with a smaller increase occurring for the amblyopic eyes. This suggests that amblyopic eyes do not have a need for strong suppression.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative measurement of interocular suppression in children with amblyopia.

TL;DR: The results suggest that interocular suppression is stronger in strabismic than in anisometropic amblyopia, and contrast interference thresholds were significantly lower in the strabistic group than in the anisometricropic and control group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Saccadic latency in amblyopia.

TL;DR: It is speculated that the frequent microsaccades and the accompanying attentional shifts, made while strabismic amblyopes struggle to maintain fixation with their amblyopic eyes, result in all types of reactions being irreducibly delayed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visuomotor Behaviour in Amblyopia: Deficits and Compensatory Adaptations

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of current knowledge about the effects of amblyopia on eye movements, upper limb reaching and grasping movements, as well as balance and gait is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impaired Temporal, Not Just Spatial, Resolution in Amblyopia

TL;DR: Amblyopia not only decreases spatial resolution, but also temporal factors such as time-based figure-ground segregation, even at high stimulus contrasts, suggests that the realm of neuronal processes that may be disturbed in amblyopia is larger than originally thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Reduced Acuity and Stereo Acuity on Saccades and Reaching Movements in Adults With Amblyopia and Strabismus.

TL;DR: Deficits in eye and limb movement initiation (latency) and target localization (precision) were associated with amblyopic acuity deficit, whereas changes in the sensorimotor reach strategy wereassociated with deficits in stereopsis.
References
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Book

Response Times: Their Role in Inferring Elementary Mental Organization

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-modelling framework for representing Response Times as Random Variables and its applications to Identification of More than Two Signals and Processing Stages and Strategies.
Book

Binocular vision and ocular motility;: Theory and management of strabismus

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a classification of Neuromuscular Anomalies of the eyes, including the following: 1. Examination of Patient I - Preliminaries 2. Examination II - Motor Signs in Heterophoria and Heterotropia 3. Examination III - Sensory Signs, Symptoms, and Binocular Adaptations in Strabismus 4. Examination IV - Amblyopia 5. Examination V - Depth Perception
Journal ArticleDOI

A Neural Theory of Binocular Rivalry

TL;DR: This article develops a neural theory of binocular rivalry that treats the phenomenon as the default outcome when binocular correspondence cannot be established, and posits the existence of monocular and binocular neurons arrayed within a functional processing module.
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