Amblyopia, a reduction in visual acuity produced by abnormal visual
experience early in life, affects up to five percent of the population.
Although all forms of amblyopia are characterized by reduced visual acuity,
functional differences in the visual capabilities of strabismic and
anisometropic amblyopes indicate that these two common forms of amblyopia
are associated with different neural abnormalities. Knowledge of the
neural basis for each form of amblyopia, much of which can only be gained
from experiments conducted with appropriate animal models, is required to
develop the optimal treatment and management strategies for this common
disorder.
The long-term objective of the proposed research is to provide insight into
human amblyopia through psychophysical investigations of monkey models.
Optical and surgical rearing strategies that simulate anisometropia and
strabismus, respectively, will be employed to produce a representative
range of amblyopias in developing rhesus monkeys. In the proposed
investigations, psychophysical procedures will be used to study monocular
and binocular visual functions that distinguish anisometropic from
strabismic amblyopia and that are thought to reflect fundamental
differences in the neural basis for these two forms of amblyopia.
Specifically, behavioral procedures will be employed to characterize
monocular spatial vision deficits (contrast sensitivity and vernier
acuity), binocular interactions (binocular summation and stereopsis), and
the prevalence of anomalous adaptive conditions that are commonly observed
in humans with abnormal binocular vision (suppression, anomalous retinal
correspondence, and eccentric fixation). These experiments will 1)
increase our understanding of how anomalous visual experience disrupts
normal visual system development and leads to vision disability and 2)
determine if, and to what extent, data obtained from monkey models of
amblyopia can be extrapolated to human amblyopia.
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