Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.

BACKGROUND: Adults with amblyopia ('lazy eye'), long-standing strabismus (ocular misalignment) or both typically do not experience visual symptoms because the signal from weaker eye is given less weight than the signal from its fellow. Here we examine the contribution of the weaker eye of...

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Main Authors: Brendan T Barrett, Gurvinder K Panesar, Andrew J Scally, Ian E Pacey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812153?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-51962ad228da46c5aa3a6b3b88f8cc962020-11-25T02:16:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01810e7787110.1371/journal.pone.0077871Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.Brendan T BarrettGurvinder K PanesarAndrew J ScallyIan E PaceyBACKGROUND: Adults with amblyopia ('lazy eye'), long-standing strabismus (ocular misalignment) or both typically do not experience visual symptoms because the signal from weaker eye is given less weight than the signal from its fellow. Here we examine the contribution of the weaker eye of individuals with strabismus and amblyopia with both eyes open and with the deviating eye in its anomalous motor position. METHODOLOGY/RESULTS: The task consisted of a blue-on-yellow detection task along a horizontal line across the central 50 degrees of the visual field. We compare the results obtained in ten individuals with strabismic amblyopia with ten visual normals. At each field location in each participant, we examined how the sensitivity exhibited under binocular conditions compared with sensitivity from four predictions, (i) a model of binocular summation, (ii) the average of the monocular sensitivities, (iii) dominant-eye sensitivity or (iv) non-dominant-eye sensitivity. The proportion of field locations for which the binocular summation model provided the best description of binocular sensitivity was similar in normals (50.6%) and amblyopes (48.2%). Average monocular sensitivity matched binocular sensitivity in 14.1% of amblyopes' field locations compared to 8.8% of normals'. Dominant-eye sensitivity explained sensitivity at 27.1% of field locations in amblyopes but 21.2% in normals. Non-dominant-eye sensitivity explained sensitivity at 10.6% of field locations in amblyopes but 19.4% in normals. Binocular summation provided the best description of the sensitivity profile in 6/10 amblyopes compared to 7/10 of normals. In three amblyopes, dominant-eye sensitivity most closely reflected binocular sensitivity (compared to two normals) and in the remaining amblyope, binocular sensitivity approximated to an average of the monocular sensitivities. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest a strong positive contribution in habitual viewing from the non-dominant eye in strabismic amblyopes. This is consistent with evidence from other sources that binocular mechanisms are frequently intact in strabismic and amblyopic individuals.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812153?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brendan T Barrett
Gurvinder K Panesar
Andrew J Scally
Ian E Pacey
spellingShingle Brendan T Barrett
Gurvinder K Panesar
Andrew J Scally
Ian E Pacey
Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Brendan T Barrett
Gurvinder K Panesar
Andrew J Scally
Ian E Pacey
author_sort Brendan T Barrett
title Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
title_short Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
title_full Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
title_fullStr Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
title_full_unstemmed Binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
title_sort binocular summation and other forms of non-dominant eye contribution in individuals with strabismic amblyopia during habitual viewing.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Adults with amblyopia ('lazy eye'), long-standing strabismus (ocular misalignment) or both typically do not experience visual symptoms because the signal from weaker eye is given less weight than the signal from its fellow. Here we examine the contribution of the weaker eye of individuals with strabismus and amblyopia with both eyes open and with the deviating eye in its anomalous motor position. METHODOLOGY/RESULTS: The task consisted of a blue-on-yellow detection task along a horizontal line across the central 50 degrees of the visual field. We compare the results obtained in ten individuals with strabismic amblyopia with ten visual normals. At each field location in each participant, we examined how the sensitivity exhibited under binocular conditions compared with sensitivity from four predictions, (i) a model of binocular summation, (ii) the average of the monocular sensitivities, (iii) dominant-eye sensitivity or (iv) non-dominant-eye sensitivity. The proportion of field locations for which the binocular summation model provided the best description of binocular sensitivity was similar in normals (50.6%) and amblyopes (48.2%). Average monocular sensitivity matched binocular sensitivity in 14.1% of amblyopes' field locations compared to 8.8% of normals'. Dominant-eye sensitivity explained sensitivity at 27.1% of field locations in amblyopes but 21.2% in normals. Non-dominant-eye sensitivity explained sensitivity at 10.6% of field locations in amblyopes but 19.4% in normals. Binocular summation provided the best description of the sensitivity profile in 6/10 amblyopes compared to 7/10 of normals. In three amblyopes, dominant-eye sensitivity most closely reflected binocular sensitivity (compared to two normals) and in the remaining amblyope, binocular sensitivity approximated to an average of the monocular sensitivities. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest a strong positive contribution in habitual viewing from the non-dominant eye in strabismic amblyopes. This is consistent with evidence from other sources that binocular mechanisms are frequently intact in strabismic and amblyopic individuals.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812153?pdf=render
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