Visual Neuroscience

  • Visual Neuroscience (2006), 23 : pp 247-256
  • Copyright © 2006 Cambridge University Press
  • DOI: 10.1017/S0952523806232097 (About DOI)
  • Published online: 24 April 2006


Sensitivity to visual motion in amblyopic macaque monkeys


LYNNE  KIORPES  a1 c1 , CHAO  TANG  a1 and J. ANTHONY  MOVSHON  a1
a1 Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York, New York

Article author query
kiorpes l   [Google Scholar] 
tang c   [Google Scholar] 
movshon ja   [Google Scholar] 
 

Abstract

Amblyopia is usually considered to be a deficit in spatial vision. But there is evidence that amblyopes may also suffer specific deficits in motion sensitivity as opposed to losses that can be explained by the known deficits in spatial vision. We measured sensitivity to visual motion in random dot displays for strabismic and anisometropic amblyopic monkeys. We used a wide range of spatial and temporal offsets and compared the performance of the fellow and amblyopic eye for each monkey. The amblyopes were severely impaired at detecting motion at fine spatial and long temporal offsets, corresponding to fine spatial scale and slow speeds. This impairment was also evident for the untreated fellow eyes of strabismic but not anisometropic amblyopes. Motion sensitivity functions for amblyopic eyes were shifted toward large spatial scales for amblyopic compared to fellow eyes, to a degree that was correlated with the shift in scale of the spatial contrast sensitivity function. Amblyopic losses in motion sensitivity, however, were not correlated with losses in spatial contrast sensitivity. This, combined with the specific impairment for detecting long temporal offsets, reveals a deficit in spatiotemporal integration in amblyopia which cannot be explained by the lower spatial resolution of amblyopic vision.

(Received October 20 2005)
(Accepted January 2 2006)


Key Words: Amblyopia; Visual motion sensitivity; Contrast sensitivity; Temporal integration.

Correspondence:
c1 Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Lynne Kiorpes, Center for Neural Science, 4 Washington Place, Room 809, New York, NY 10003, USA. E-mail: lynne@cns.nyu.edu


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