Literature DB >> 7108645

Nonmotor component of fusional response to vertical disparity: a second look using an afterimage method.

A L Duwaer.   

Abstract

An afterimage method has been used to investigate the relative magnitudes of the nonmotor and motor components of the fusional response to vertical disparity in a complex visual stimulus of diameter 57 degrees consisting of 50 horizontal lines and a square of side 2.5 degrees in the middle. The largest vertical disparity that evoked a stable fusional response was found to be in the range 3-6 degrees, of which the nonmotor component amounted only to 8-15', i.e., 2-10% of the total. At these fusional amplitudes, binocular single vision was already disrupted in the foveola. When the 50 horizontal lines were omitted from the stimulus so that only the central square of side 2.5 degrees remained, the fusional amplitudes decreased by only 25% while the absolute level of the nonmotor components remained the same. The nonmotor components found here are much smaller than those (amounting to about 2 degrees, or 25-40% of the total response) reported recently in the literature.

Mesh:

Year:  1982        PMID: 7108645     DOI: 10.1364/josa.72.000871

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Opt Soc Am        ISSN: 0030-3941


  3 in total

1.  Variation of binocular-vertical fusion amplitude with convergence.

Authors:  Shrikant R Bharadwaj; M Pia Hoenig; Viswanathan C Sivaramakrishnan; Baskaran Karthikeyan; Donna Simonian; Katie Mau; Sally Rastani; Clifton M Schor
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 4.799

2.  Vertical vergence in nonhuman primates depends on horizontal gaze position.

Authors:  Samuel Adade; Vallabh E Das
Journal:  Strabismus       Date:  2019-06-21

3.  Patent stereopsis with diplopia in random-dot stereograms.

Authors:  A L Duwaer
Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1983-05
  3 in total

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