| Literature DB >> 32410957 |
Yiya Chen1, Seung Hyun Min2, Ziyun Cheng1, Shijia Chen1, Zili Wang1, Chunwen Tao1, Fan Lu1, Jia Qu1, Pi-Chun Huang3, Robert F Hess2, Jiawei Zhou1.
Abstract
Studies on binocular combination and rivalry show that short-term deprivation strengthens the contribution of the deprived eye in binocular vision. However, whether short-term monocular deprivation affects temporal processing per se is not clear. To address this issue, we conducted a study to investigate the effect of monocular deprivation on dichoptic temporal synchrony. We tested ten adults with normal vision and patched their dominant eye with an opaque patch for 2.5 h. A temporal synchrony paradigm was used to measure if temporal synchrony thresholds change as a result of monocular pattern deprivation. In this paradigm, we displayed two pairs of Gaussian blobs flickering at 1 Hz with either the same or different phased- temporal modulation. In Experiment 1, we obtained the thresholds for detecting temporal asynchrony under dichoptic viewing configurations. We compared the thresholds for temporal synchrony between before and after monocular deprivation and found no significant changes of the interocular synchrony. In Experiment 2, we measured the monocular thresholds for detecting temporal asynchrony. We also found no significant changes of the monocular synchrony of either the patched eye or the unpatched eye. Our findings suggest that short-term monocular deprivation induced-plasticity does not influence monocular or dichoptic temporal synchrony at low temporal frequency.Entities:
Keywords: interocular suppression; monocular deprivation; temporal processing; temporal synchrony; visual plasticity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32410957 PMCID: PMC7198853 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1An illustration of the experimental procedure. We deprived one eye for 2.5 h, and assessed the temporal synchrony thresholds at baseline, and 0, 10, 20, 30 min after the finish of the 2.5-h of deprivation.
FIGURE 2Deprivation effect under dichoptic viewing configuration. (A) An illustration of the Di configuration. Both the signal and reference blobs were presented dichoptically to different eyes. (B) Dichoptic temporal synchrony threshold in the function of various time points before and after deprivation. Each green dot represents the threshold of each subject. Green triangle denotes the average threshold across ten subjects. Error bars represent standard errors.
FIGURE 3Deprivation effect under monocular viewing configurations. (A) Monocular dominant eye viewing (MD). Both signal and reference blobs were presented to the dominant eye (i.e., the assigned patched eye). (B) Monocular non-dominant eye viewing (MND). Both signal and reference blobs were presented to the non-dominant eye (i.e., the assigned unpatched eye). (C) Monocular temporal synchrony threshold in the function of various time points before and after deprivation. The red plot corresponds to MD configurations, and blue plot to MND. Each dot (blue or red) represents the threshold of each subject. Open symbols (blue circle or red square) denote the average threshold across ten subjects. Error bars (blue or red) represent standard errors. (D) Correlation between the changes of monocular temporal synchrony in the deprived eye and non-deprived eye. Error bars represent standard error.