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Foveal

About: Foveal is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2652 publications have been published within this topic receiving 94120 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The frequency range of the foveal areas with their flutter processing neurons overlaps exactly with the frequency range where DS compensating bats most likely receive echoes from fluttering insects, indicating that auditory fovea and DSC are adaptations for the detection and evaluation of insects flying in clutter.
Abstract: Rhythmical modulations in insect echoes caused by the moving wings of fluttering insects are behaviourally relevant information for bats emitting CF-FM signals with a high duty cycle. Transmitter and receiver of the echolocation system in flutter detecting foragers are especially adapted for the processing of flutter information. The adaptations of the transmitter are indicated by a flutter induced increase in duty cycle, and by Doppler shift compensation (DSC) that keeps the carrier frequency of the insect echoes near a reference frequency. An adaptation of the receiver is the auditory fovea on the basilar membrane, a highly expanded frequency representation centred to the reference frequency. The afferent projections from the fovea lead to foveal areas with an overrepresentation of sharply tuned neurons with best frequencies near the reference frequency throughout the entire auditory pathway. These foveal neurons are very sensitive to stimuli with natural and simulated flutter information. The frequency range of the foveal areas with their flutter processing neurons overlaps exactly with the frequency range where DS compensating bats most likely receive echoes from fluttering insects. This tight match indicates that auditory fovea and DSC are adaptations for the detection and evaluation of insects flying in clutter.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that both acuity and difficulty of the search task influenced the span of the effective stimulus during visual search, and the importance of foveal vision during search.
Abstract: The span of the effective stimulus during visual search through an unstructured alphanumeric array was investigated by using eye-contingent-display changes while the subjects searched for a target letter. In one condition, a window exposing the search array moved in synchrony with the subjects’ eye movements, and the size of the window was varied. Performance reached asymptotic levels when the window was 5°. In another condition, a foveal mask moved in synchrony with each eye movement, and the size of the mask was varied. The foveal mask conditions were much more detrimental to search behavior than the window conditions, indicating the importance of foveal vision during search. The size of the array also influenced performance, but performance reached asymptote for all array sizes tested at the same window size, and the effect of the foveal mask was the same for all array sizes. The results indicate that both acuity and difficulty of the search task influenced the span of the effective stimulus during visual search.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Deaf people were more proficient in redirecting attention from one spatial location to another in the presence of irrelevant foveal information, suggesting that differences exist in the development of attentional mechanisms in deaf and hearing people.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The foveal region is normally avascular during development, as in adult life, and there is no evidence offoveal vascularization during development of the human retina.
Abstract: Objective To study the development of the perifoveal retinal vasculature. Methods We studied 7 retinas aged between 26 weeks' gestation and 1 week postnatal (41 weeks' gestation). Sections were imaged using high-resolution digital photography and blood vessel profiles identified at 200% to 300% magnification. Flat mounts were immunolabeled using antibodies to CD31 and factor VIII to identify blood vessels and antibodies to rhodopsin to identify the rod-free zone. Results The foveal region was identified by the absence of rod photoreceptors in the outer retina and/or presence of a shallow depression in the inner retina. The whole mount at 26 weeks' gestation showed a blood vessel–free region centered on the rod-free zone that was open along the horizontal meridian on the temporal side. At 37 weeks' gestation, the foveal avascular zone formed a complete circle. In sections, the foveal avascular zone was approximately 500 μm in diameter at 35 weeks' gestation and 300 to 350 μm at 40 weeks' gestation; in whole mounts, it was 150 to 170 μm in diameter at 37 and 41 weeks' gestation. Conclusions The foveal region is normally avascular during development, as in adult life. We found no evidence of foveal vascularization during development of the human retina. Clinical Relevance Instances of vascularization of the foveal region are not due to failed regression of a transient vasculature.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the correlation of visual acuity and the thickness of the foveal photoreceptor layer in eyes with persistent cystoid macular edema associated with branch retinal vein occlusion.

129 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023144
2022385
202195
2020119
2019108
201883