Asymmetric Dichoptic Masking in Visual Cortex of Amblyopic Macaque Monkeys
Autor: | J. Anthony Movshon, Virginia García-Marín, Jenna G. Kelly, Lynne Kiorpes, Luke E. Hallum, Najib J. Majaj, Romesh D. Kumbhani, Christopher Shooner |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Masking (art)
genetic structures media_common.quotation_subject Perceptual Masking Amblyopia Macaque 050105 experimental psychology Ocular dominance 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine biology.animal medicine Animals Contrast (vision) 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Research Articles Visual Cortex media_common Anisometropia Vision Binocular Communication biology business.industry General Neuroscience 05 social sciences Neural Inhibition medicine.disease eye diseases Dominance Ocular Visual cortex medicine.anatomical_structure Female sense organs Macaca nemestrina Nerve Net Psychology business Neuroscience Binocular vision Photic Stimulation 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | The Journal of Neuroscience. 37:8734-8741 |
ISSN: | 1529-2401 0270-6474 |
DOI: | 10.1523/jneurosci.1760-17.2017 |
Popis: | In amblyopia, abnormal visual experience leads to an extreme form of eye dominance, in which vision through the nondominant eye is degraded. A key aspect of this disorder is perceptual suppression: the image seen by the stronger eye often dominates during binocular viewing, blocking the image of the weaker eye from reaching awareness. Interocular suppression is the focus of ongoing work aimed at understanding and treating amblyopia, yet its physiological basis remains unknown. We measured binocular interactions in visual cortex of anesthetized amblyopic monkeys (female Macaca nemestrina), using 96-channel "Utah" arrays to record from populations of neurons in V1 and V2. In an experiment reported recently (Hallum et al., 2017), we found that reduced excitatory input from the amblyopic eye (AE) revealed a form of balanced binocular suppression that is unaltered in amblyopia. Here, we report on the modulation of the gain of excitatory signals from the AE by signals from its dominant fellow eye (FE). Using a dichoptic masking technique, we found that AE responses to grating stimuli were attenuated by the presentation of a noise mask to the FE, as in a normal control animal. Responses to FE stimuli, by contrast, could not be masked from the AE. We conclude that a weakened ability of the amblyopic eye to modulate cortical response gain creates an imbalance of suppression that favors the dominant eye.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT In amblyopia, vision in one eye is impaired as a result of abnormal early visual experience. Behavioral observations in humans with amblyopia suggest that much of their visual loss is due to active suppression of their amblyopic eye. Here we describe experiments in which we studied binocular interactions in macaques with experimentally induced amblyopia. In normal monkeys, the gain of neuronal response to stimulation of one eye is modulated by contrast in the other eye, but in monkeys with amblyopia the balance of gain modulation is altered so that the weaker, amblyopic eye has little effect while the stronger fellow eye has a strong effect. This asymmetric suppression may be a key component of the perceptual losses in amblyopia. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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