Gambacorta Christina, Ding Jian, McKee Suzanne P, Levi Dennis M
School of Optometry, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Vis. 2018 Mar 1;18(3):20. doi: 10.1167/18.3.20.
Abnormal early visual development can result in a constellation of neural and visual deficits collectively known as amblyopia. Among the many deficits, a common finding is that both saccadic and manual reaction times to targets presented to the amblyopic eye are substantially delayed when compared to the fellow eye or to normal eyes. Given the well-known deficits in contrast sensitivity in the amblyopic eye, a natural question is whether the prolonged reaction times are simply a consequence of reduced stimulus visibility. To address this question, in Experiment 1 we measure saccadic reaction times (RT) to perifoveal stimuli as a function of effective stimulus contrast (i.e., contrast scaled by the amblyopic eye's contrast threshold). We find that when sensory differences between the eyes are minimized, the asymptotic RTs of our anisometropic amblyopes were similar in the two eyes. However, our results suggest that some strabismic amblyopes have an irreducible delay at the asymptote. That is, even when the sensory differences of the stimulus were accounted for, these observers still had large interocular differences (on average, 77 ms) in saccadic reaction time. In Experiment 2, to assess the role of fixation on saccadic reaction time we compared reaction time with and without a foveal target (the "gap effect"). Our results suggest that, while removing the fixation target does indeed speed up reaction time in the amblyopic eye, the gap effect is similar in the two eyes. Therefore, the gap effect does not eliminate the irreducible delay in the amblyopic eye. Finally, in Experiment 3 we compared the interocular differences in saccadic and manual reaction times in the same observers. This allowed us to determine the relationship between the latencies in the two modalities. We found a strong correlation between the differences in saccadic and manual reaction times; however, the manual RT difference is about half that of saccadic RT, suggesting that there may be two separable effects on saccadic reaction time: (a) a central problem with directing actions to a target, related to disengagement of attention at the fovea, which results in delays in both saccadic and manual reaction times, and (b) a further delay in saccadic reaction times because of the motor refractory period from a previous saccade or microsaccade, made in an attempt to stabilize the amblyopic eye of strabismics.
早期视觉发育异常可导致一系列神经和视觉缺陷,统称为弱视。在众多缺陷中,一个常见的发现是,与对侧眼或正常眼相比,向弱视眼呈现目标时的扫视反应时间和手动反应时间都大幅延迟。鉴于弱视眼对比度敏感度存在众所周知的缺陷,一个自然而然的问题是,反应时间延长是否仅仅是刺激可见度降低的结果。为了解决这个问题,在实验1中,我们测量了对中央凹周围刺激的扫视反应时间(RT),作为有效刺激对比度的函数(即对比度按弱视眼的对比度阈值进行缩放)。我们发现,当两眼之间的感觉差异最小化时,我们的屈光参差性弱视患者两眼的渐近反应时间相似。然而,我们的结果表明,一些斜视性弱视患者在渐近线处存在不可减少的延迟。也就是说,即使考虑了刺激的感觉差异,这些观察者在扫视反应时间上仍存在较大的两眼间差异(平均77毫秒)。在实验2中,为了评估注视对扫视反应时间的作用,我们比较了有和没有中央凹目标时的反应时间(“间隙效应”)。我们的结果表明,虽然移除注视目标确实会加快弱视眼的反应时间,但两眼的间隙效应相似。因此,间隙效应并不能消除弱视眼中不可减少的延迟。最后,在实验3中,我们比较了同一观察者两眼间扫视反应时间和手动反应时间的差异。这使我们能够确定两种模式下潜伏期之间的关系。我们发现扫视反应时间和手动反应时间的差异之间存在很强的相关性;然而,手动反应时间的差异约为扫视反应时间差异的一半,这表明扫视反应时间可能受到两种可分离的影响:(a)将动作指向目标的中枢问题,与中央凹处注意力的脱离有关,这会导致扫视反应时间和手动反应时间都延迟,以及(b)由于先前为稳定斜视性弱视患者的弱视眼而进行的扫视或微扫视产生的运动不应期,导致扫视反应时间进一步延迟。