| Literature DB >> 25735899 |
Jiawei Zhou1, Lin Li2, Pan Zhang1, Jie Xi1, Yifeng Zhou2, Zhong-Lin Lu3, Chang-Bing Huang1.
Abstract
With abnormal visual cortical development, amblyopia is generally associated with high spatial frequency deficits in spatial vision. In this study, we aim to answer a critical question: How much high spatial frequency information is available to the amblyopic visual system? We measured the tilt after-effect following adaption to perceptually resolvable and unresolvable sinewave gratings, and showed that gratings with spatial frequency up to 1.5 times the cutoff frequency in grating orientation identification can still produce significant tilt after-effects in adults with amblyopia. Our results suggest that neural connections in the amblyopic visual cortex, at least in V1, may have profoundly developed to represent high spatial frequency information. The demonstration of extant neural connections for high spatial frequencies may have important implications for the development of training protocols for amblyopia treatment. Our paradigm may also serve as a non-invasive probe to diagnose the status of neural connections in other visual deficits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25735899 PMCID: PMC4348659 DOI: 10.1038/srep08728
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The tilt after-effect (TAE).
(a) Adapting to a high-contrast grating tilted +15° from horizontal rendered a grating tilted θ(+) perceptually horizontal. (b) Adapting to a high-contrast grating tilted −15° from horizontal rendered a grating tilted θ(−) perceptually horizontal. The TAE threshold is quantified as the mean of θ(+) and θ(−) to eliminate potential orientation bias.
Figure 2Orientation identification accuracy and TAE thresholds for the amblyopic eye of six amblyopic observers.
Each panel represents results from one observer. (a) The ‘’ symbols represent the accuracy in identifying the orientation of high contrast sinewave gratings. The red dashed line indicates the cutoff spatial frequency in grating orientation identification, defined as the lowest spatial frequency associated with chance performance in orientation identification. The standard error of the cutoff spatial frequency was estimated using a bootstrap procedure with 500 resampling repetitions and is marked as a pink rectangle area surrounding the red dashed line in each panel. The gray rectangle area marks the range of unresolvable spatial frequencies. (b) The ‘’ symbols represent TAE thresholds following adaptation to sinewave gratings of different spatial frequencies. The error bars represent standard errors estimated from a bootstrap procedure. The blue solid lines represent the best linear fits to the TAE threshold vs. spatial frequency functions. The x-intercepts of the blue lines indicate the cutoff spatial frequencies in generating TAE.
Characteristics of the amblyopic observers. Abbreviations: AE = amblyopic eye; FE = fellow eye; DS = diopters sphere; DC = diopters cylinder; MAR = minimum angle of resolution
| Observer ID | Age (yr) | Sex | Eye | Correction | Visual acuity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | 23 | Male | AE | +0.50DS/+1.00DC × 60° | 0.19 |
| FE | −3.25DS/−0.50DC × 15° | −0.25 | |||
| S2 | 23 | Male | AE | +3.00DS/+0.50DC × 90° | 0.37 |
| FE | −0.50DS/−0.50DC × 5° | 0.18 | |||
| S3 | 23 | Female | AE | +0.50DS/+0.50DC × 95° | 0.18 |
| FE | −3.00DS | −0.03 | |||
| S4 | 17 | Male | AE | +2.50DS | 0.57 |
| FE | −3.00DS | 0.07 | |||
| S5 | 24 | Male | AE | +1.00DS/+1.00DC × 90° | 0.18 |
| FE | −0.75DS/−0.50DC × 180° | −0.03 | |||
| S6 | 24 | Female | AE | +1.50DC × 135° | 0.18 |
| FE | −4.00DS | −0.03 |
†Visual acuity was measured with the Chinese Tumbling E Chart and defined as the log minimum angle of resolution (MAR) associated with 75% correct identification.
Z-scores of the magnitudes of the measured TAE. SF1 to SF5 represent the five adapting spatial frequency (from low to high) conditions for each observer. All p < 0.05
| SF1 | SF2 | SF3 | SF4 | SF5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | 16.79 | 12.14 | 4.43 | 5.41 | 2.74 |
| S2 | 9.81 | 8.84 | 9.67 | 1.81 | 4.00 |
| S3 | 20.05 | 10.38 | 13.06 | 7.93 | 7.46 |
| S4 | 24.80 | 13.88 | 2.97 | 3.67 | 8.98 |
| S5 | 26.14 | 12.95 | 13.09 | 3.19 | 7.27 |
| S6 | 9.46 | 4.60 | 11.39 | 5.07 | 4.10 |
Figure 3The relationship between TAE and orientation identification.
(a) Cutoff spatial frequency in generating TAE as a function of cutoff spatial frequency in orientation identification. Each ‘’ symbol represents data from one observer. The green solid line is the linear regression to the data with a slope of 1.49, indicating that the cutoff spatial frequency in orientation adaptation is about 1.49 times that in orientation identification. The gray area covers the 95% confidence interval of the regression model. The lower black dashed line is the identity line (slope = 1). (b) Average normalized TAE threshold as a function of normalized adapting spatial frequency. The adapting spatial frequency was normalized to the cutoff spatial frequency in orientation identification. The magnitude of the TAE was normalized to TAE threshold at the orientation identification cutoff frequency. The ‘’ symbols represent data averaged across observers. The gray rectangle area marks the range of unresolvable spatial frequencies. The blue line represents the best-weighted linear fit to the data. The x-intercept of the best fitting linear model indicates the normalized cutoff spatial frequency in generating TAE. Error bars indicate S.E.M.