Acquafredda Miriam, Binda Paola
Department of Translational Research on New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
Department of Translational Research on New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
Vision Res. 2024 Sep;222:108449. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2024.108449. Epub 2024 Jun 22.
Short-term monocular deprivation in normally sighted adult humans produces a transient shift of ocular dominance, boosting the deprived eye. This effect has been documented with both perceptual tests and through physiological recordings, but no previous study simultaneously measured physiological responses and the perceptual effects of deprivation. Here we propose an integrated experimental paradigm that combines binocular rivalry with pupillometry, to introduce an objective physiological index of ocular dominance plasticity, acquired concurrently with perceptual testing. Ten participants reported the perceptual dynamics of binocular rivalry, while we measured pupil diameter. Stimuli were a white and a black disk, each presented monocularly. Rivalry dynamics and pupil-size traces were compared before and after 2 h of monocular deprivation, achieved by applying a translucent patch over the dominant eye. Consistent with prior research, we observed that monocular deprivation boosts the deprived-eye signal and consequently increases ocular dominance. In line with previous studies, we also observed subtle but systematic modulations of pupil size that tracked alternations between exclusive dominance phases of the black or white disk. Following monocular deprivation, the amplitude of these pupil-size modulations increased, which is consistent with the post-deprivation boost of the deprived eye and the increase of ocular dominance. This provides evidence that deprivation impacts the effective strength of monocular visual stimuli, coherently affecting perceptual reports and the automatic and unconscious regulation of pupil diameter. Our results show that a combined paradigm of binocular rivalry and pupillometry gives new insights into the physiological mechanisms underlying deprivation effects.
在视力正常的成年人中,短期单眼剥夺会导致眼优势的短暂转变,增强被剥夺眼的功能。这种效应已通过知觉测试和生理记录得到证实,但此前没有研究同时测量生理反应和剥夺的知觉效应。在这里,我们提出了一种综合实验范式,将双眼竞争与瞳孔测量相结合,以引入一个眼优势可塑性的客观生理指标,该指标与知觉测试同时获得。十名参与者报告了双眼竞争的知觉动态,同时我们测量了瞳孔直径。刺激物是一个白色圆盘和一个黑色圆盘,每个圆盘单眼呈现。在通过在优势眼上贴上半透明贴片实现单眼剥夺2小时前后,比较了竞争动态和瞳孔大小轨迹。与先前的研究一致,我们观察到单眼剥夺增强了被剥夺眼的信号,从而增加了眼优势。与先前的研究一致,我们还观察到瞳孔大小的细微但系统的调制,这些调制跟踪了黑色或白色圆盘独占优势阶段之间的交替。单眼剥夺后,这些瞳孔大小调制的幅度增加,这与剥夺后被剥夺眼的增强和眼优势的增加一致。这提供了证据,表明剥夺会影响单眼视觉刺激的有效强度,连贯地影响知觉报告以及瞳孔直径的自动和无意识调节。我们的结果表明,双眼竞争和瞳孔测量的组合范式为剥夺效应背后的生理机制提供了新的见解。