Perceptual Learning with Dichoptic Attention Tasks Improves Attentional Modulation in V1 and IPS and Reduces Interocular Suppression in Human Amblyopia
Authors
Affiliations
Long-term and chronic visual suppression to the non-preferred eye in early childhood is a key factor in developing amblyopia, as well as a critical barrier to treat amblyopia. To explore the relationship between selective visual attention and amblyopic suppression and its role in the success of amblyopic training, we used EEG source-imaging to show that training human adults with strabismic and anisometropic amblyopia with dichoptic attention tasks improved attentional modulation of neural populations in the primary visual cortex (V1) and intraparietal sulcus (IPS). We also used psychophysics to show that training reduced interocular suppression along with visual acuity and stereoacuity improvements. Importantly, our results revealed that the reduction of interocular suppression by training was significantly correlated with the improvement of selective visual attention in both training-related and -unrelated tasks in the amblyopic eye, relative to the fellow eye. These findings suggest a relation between interocular suppression and selective visual attention bias between eyes in amblyopic vision, and that dichoptic training with high-attention demand tasks in the amblyopic eye might be an effective way to treat amblyopia.
Monocular eye-cueing shifts eye balance in amblyopia.
Wong S, Hess R, Mullen K J Vis. 2025; 25(1):6.
PMID: 39775723 PMC: 11724371. DOI: 10.1167/jov.25.1.6.
Hou C, Zhou Z, Uner I, Nicholas S Brain Sci. 2024; 14(11.
PMID: 39595911 PMC: 11591568. DOI: 10.3390/brainsci14111148.
Hernandez-Rodriguez C, Ferrer-Soldevila P, Artola-Roig A, Pinero D Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol. 2024; 262(9):3007-3020.
PMID: 38578335 PMC: 11377642. DOI: 10.1007/s00417-024-06475-0.
Current Developments in the Management of Amblyopia with the Use of Perceptual Learning Techniques.
Tsaousis K, Mousteris G, Diakonis V, Chaloulis S Medicina (Kaunas). 2024; 60(1).
PMID: 38256309 PMC: 10821148. DOI: 10.3390/medicina60010048.
A new approach to measure interocular suppression in amblyopia and strabismus.
Hou C MethodsX. 2024; 12:102527.
PMID: 38204980 PMC: 10777102. DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2023.102527.