Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.

<h4>Unlabelled</h4>Abnormal visual experience during a sensitive period of development disrupts neuronal circuitry in the visual cortex and results in abnormal spatial vision or amblyopia. Here we examined whether playing video games can induce plasticity in the visual system of adults w...

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Main Authors: Roger W Li, Charlie Ngo, Jennie Nguyen, Dennis M Levi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-08-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21912514/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-03148db77956402daad95ede416340c32021-07-02T16:27:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852011-08-0198e100113510.1371/journal.pbio.1001135Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.Roger W LiCharlie NgoJennie NguyenDennis M Levi<h4>Unlabelled</h4>Abnormal visual experience during a sensitive period of development disrupts neuronal circuitry in the visual cortex and results in abnormal spatial vision or amblyopia. Here we examined whether playing video games can induce plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia. Specifically 20 adults with amblyopia (age 15-61 y; visual acuity: 20/25-20/480, with no manifest ocular disease or nystagmus) were recruited and allocated into three intervention groups: action videogame group (n = 10), non-action videogame group (n = 3), and crossover control group (n = 7). Our experiments show that playing video games (both action and non-action games) for a short period of time (40-80 h, 2 h/d) using the amblyopic eye results in a substantial improvement in a wide range of fundamental visual functions, from low-level to high-level, including visual acuity (33%), positional acuity (16%), spatial attention (37%), and stereopsis (54%). Using a cross-over experimental design (first 20 h: occlusion therapy, and the next 40 h: videogame therapy), we can conclude that the improvement cannot be explained simply by eye patching alone. We quantified the limits and the time course of visual plasticity induced by video-game experience. The recovery in visual acuity that we observed is at least 5-fold faster than would be expected from occlusion therapy in childhood amblyopia. We used positional noise and modelling to reveal the neural mechanisms underlying the visual improvements in terms of decreased spatial distortion (7%) and increased processing efficiency (33%). Our study had several limitations: small sample size, lack of randomization, and differences in numbers between groups. A large-scale randomized clinical study is needed to confirm the therapeutic value of video-game treatment in clinical situations. Nonetheless, taken as a pilot study, this work suggests that video-game play may provide important principles for treating amblyopia, and perhaps other cortical dysfunctions.<h4>Trial registration</h4>ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01223716.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21912514/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roger W Li
Charlie Ngo
Jennie Nguyen
Dennis M Levi
spellingShingle Roger W Li
Charlie Ngo
Jennie Nguyen
Dennis M Levi
Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Roger W Li
Charlie Ngo
Jennie Nguyen
Dennis M Levi
author_sort Roger W Li
title Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
title_short Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
title_full Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
title_fullStr Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
title_full_unstemmed Video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
title_sort video-game play induces plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2011-08-01
description <h4>Unlabelled</h4>Abnormal visual experience during a sensitive period of development disrupts neuronal circuitry in the visual cortex and results in abnormal spatial vision or amblyopia. Here we examined whether playing video games can induce plasticity in the visual system of adults with amblyopia. Specifically 20 adults with amblyopia (age 15-61 y; visual acuity: 20/25-20/480, with no manifest ocular disease or nystagmus) were recruited and allocated into three intervention groups: action videogame group (n = 10), non-action videogame group (n = 3), and crossover control group (n = 7). Our experiments show that playing video games (both action and non-action games) for a short period of time (40-80 h, 2 h/d) using the amblyopic eye results in a substantial improvement in a wide range of fundamental visual functions, from low-level to high-level, including visual acuity (33%), positional acuity (16%), spatial attention (37%), and stereopsis (54%). Using a cross-over experimental design (first 20 h: occlusion therapy, and the next 40 h: videogame therapy), we can conclude that the improvement cannot be explained simply by eye patching alone. We quantified the limits and the time course of visual plasticity induced by video-game experience. The recovery in visual acuity that we observed is at least 5-fold faster than would be expected from occlusion therapy in childhood amblyopia. We used positional noise and modelling to reveal the neural mechanisms underlying the visual improvements in terms of decreased spatial distortion (7%) and increased processing efficiency (33%). Our study had several limitations: small sample size, lack of randomization, and differences in numbers between groups. A large-scale randomized clinical study is needed to confirm the therapeutic value of video-game treatment in clinical situations. Nonetheless, taken as a pilot study, this work suggests that video-game play may provide important principles for treating amblyopia, and perhaps other cortical dysfunctions.<h4>Trial registration</h4>ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01223716.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21912514/?tool=EBI
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