Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes

Amblyopia is a developmental abnormality of visual cortex. Although amblyopes experience perceptual deficits in spatial vision tasks, they have less temporal sensitivity loss. We investigated whether their temporal synchrony sensitivity is impaired. In experiment 1, four Gaussian blobs, located at t...

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Main Authors: Pi-Chun Huang, Jinrong Li, Daming Deng, Minbin Yu, Robert F Hess
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/if656
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spelling doaj-0d70aa097bb64e3886e264ab5cfa30112020-11-25T03:34:06ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952012-10-01310.1068/if65610.1068_if656Asynchrony Detection in AmblyopesPi-Chun Huang0Jinrong LiDaming DengMinbin YuRobert F HessNational Cheng Kung University, Taiwan; and Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaAmblyopia is a developmental abnormality of visual cortex. Although amblyopes experience perceptual deficits in spatial vision tasks, they have less temporal sensitivity loss. We investigated whether their temporal synchrony sensitivity is impaired. In experiment 1, four Gaussian blobs, located at the top, bottom, left, and right of a presentation screen, were flickering in 3 Hz and one of them was flickering in out-of-phase fashion in time. Participants needed to tell which blob was different from the other three and contrast threshold of the blobs was measured to determine the synchrony detection threshold. We found the thresholds were not correlated with the contrast thresholds for detecting the flickering blobs, suggesting synchrony detection and temporal detection threshold are processed by different mechanisms. In experiment 2, synchrony thresholds were measured as participants' ability to tell if one of the four high contrast Gaussian blobs was flickering asynchronously in time. Three temporal frequencies (1, 2, and 3 Hz) and two element separations (1.25 and 5 deg) were compared. We found that the amblyopic group exhibited a deficit only for the 1.25 deg element separation in amblyopic eye but was normal for the other configurations compared to controlled participants. It suggests amblyopes have deficits in temporal processing but only for foveal vision. We also found the sensitivity for the non-strabismic anismetropia group is reduced for all three temporal frequencies whereas for the strabismic anisometropia group it was reduced at 3Hz only, suggesting the impairment in temporal synchrony might be different for different types of amblyopia.https://doi.org/10.1068/if656
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pi-Chun Huang
Jinrong Li
Daming Deng
Minbin Yu
Robert F Hess
spellingShingle Pi-Chun Huang
Jinrong Li
Daming Deng
Minbin Yu
Robert F Hess
Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes
i-Perception
author_facet Pi-Chun Huang
Jinrong Li
Daming Deng
Minbin Yu
Robert F Hess
author_sort Pi-Chun Huang
title Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes
title_short Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes
title_full Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes
title_fullStr Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes
title_full_unstemmed Asynchrony Detection in Amblyopes
title_sort asynchrony detection in amblyopes
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2012-10-01
description Amblyopia is a developmental abnormality of visual cortex. Although amblyopes experience perceptual deficits in spatial vision tasks, they have less temporal sensitivity loss. We investigated whether their temporal synchrony sensitivity is impaired. In experiment 1, four Gaussian blobs, located at the top, bottom, left, and right of a presentation screen, were flickering in 3 Hz and one of them was flickering in out-of-phase fashion in time. Participants needed to tell which blob was different from the other three and contrast threshold of the blobs was measured to determine the synchrony detection threshold. We found the thresholds were not correlated with the contrast thresholds for detecting the flickering blobs, suggesting synchrony detection and temporal detection threshold are processed by different mechanisms. In experiment 2, synchrony thresholds were measured as participants' ability to tell if one of the four high contrast Gaussian blobs was flickering asynchronously in time. Three temporal frequencies (1, 2, and 3 Hz) and two element separations (1.25 and 5 deg) were compared. We found that the amblyopic group exhibited a deficit only for the 1.25 deg element separation in amblyopic eye but was normal for the other configurations compared to controlled participants. It suggests amblyopes have deficits in temporal processing but only for foveal vision. We also found the sensitivity for the non-strabismic anismetropia group is reduced for all three temporal frequencies whereas for the strabismic anisometropia group it was reduced at 3Hz only, suggesting the impairment in temporal synchrony might be different for different types of amblyopia.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/if656
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AT jinrongli asynchronydetectioninamblyopes
AT damingdeng asynchronydetectioninamblyopes
AT minbinyu asynchronydetectioninamblyopes
AT robertfhess asynchronydetectioninamblyopes
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