Literature DB >> 11100889

Childhood visual experience affects adult voluntary ocular motor control.

E C Hall1, J Gordon, L Hainline, I Abramov, K Engber.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To quantify the effects of childhood visual experience/chronic visual deprivation upon adult voluntary ocular motor control.
METHODS: Eye movements of blind and sighted adults were elicited and videotaped in total darkness. The videotaped responses were digitized using an eye tracker, yielding data from 10 congenitally blind (infantile onset, blindness before age 1 year), 16 adventitiously blind, and 9 sighted persons.
RESULTS: Multivariate analysis of variance, trend analyses and post hoc tests revealed that primary position fixational stability and consistency of return to primary position were lowest in the congenitally blind vs. the adventitiously blind group, and highest in the sighted. Duration of adventitious blindness reduced primary position stability but not consistency of return to primary position. Secondary position maximum amplitudes: congenitally blind mean, 14 degrees; adventitiously blind mean, 40 degrees; sighted mean, 47 degrees. Average velocity (a form of Main Sequence) increased significantly with amplitude in all three groups.
CONCLUSIONS: Visual deprivation can greatly attenuate but does not abolish human voluntary eye movement. Adventitious blindness exerts minimal to profound effects, commensurate with age of vision loss.

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Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11100889     DOI: 10.1097/00006324-200010000-00005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Optom Vis Sci        ISSN: 1040-5488            Impact factor:   1.973


  5 in total

1.  Pseudo-fovea formation after gene therapy for RPE65-LCA.

Authors:  Artur V Cideciyan; Geoffrey K Aguirre; Samuel G Jacobson; Omar H Butt; Sharon B Schwartz; Malgorzata Swider; Alejandro J Roman; Sam Sadigh; William W Hauswirth
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2014-12-23       Impact factor: 4.799

Review 2.  Leber congenital amaurosis due to RPE65 mutations and its treatment with gene therapy.

Authors:  Artur V Cideciyan
Journal:  Prog Retin Eye Res       Date:  2010-04-24       Impact factor: 21.198

3.  Orienting auditory spatial attention engages frontal eye fields and medial occipital cortex in congenitally blind humans.

Authors:  Arun Garg; Daniel Schwartz; Alexander A Stevens
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2007-02-25       Impact factor: 3.139

4.  Developing an Outcome Measure With High Luminance for Optogenetics Treatment of Severe Retinal Degenerations and for Gene Therapy of Cone Diseases.

Authors:  Artur V Cideciyan; Alejandro J Roman; Samuel G Jacobson; Boyuan Yan; Michele Pascolini; Jason Charng; Simone Pajaro; Sheila Nirenberg
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2016-06-01       Impact factor: 4.799

5.  Neurological basis for eye movements of the blind.

Authors:  Rosalyn M Schneider; Matthew J Thurtell; Sylvia Eisele; Norah Lincoff; Elisa Bala; R John Leigh
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-18       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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