The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2003, 23(7):2522
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Noise Provides Some New Signals About the Spatial Vision of
Amblyopes
Dennis M.
Levi and
Stanley A.
Klein
University of California at Berkeley, School of Optometry and Helen
Wills Neuroscience Institute, Berkeley, California 94720-2020
Amblyopia results in a loss of contrast sensitivity and position
acuity. Here we report the results of experiments using noise to try to
better understand the nature of the neural losses in amblyopia. In the
first experiment, we used noise to derive the template or
classification image used to detect a target and to discriminate
its position. We found that some amblyopic observers show markedly
abnormal templates for the position task and moderately abnormal
classification images for the detection task; however, the abnormal
template could not fully account for the loss of performance
(efficiency). Reduced efficiency in the amblyopic visual system may
reflect a poorly matched template, a high fraction of internal to
external noise, or both. Comparison of the observers' performance with
that of their template suggests that the amblyopes have a high fraction
of internal (relative to external) noise. To analyze the internal noise
further, we used a "double-pass" technique, in which observers
performed the identical experiment twice. The amount of disagreement
between the two experiments provides another estimate of the fraction
of internal noise. Amblyopes show a much higher fraction of
stimulus-dependent internal noise than do normal observers. We conclude
that the loss of efficiency in amblyopia is attributable in part to a
poorly matched template, but to a greater degree, to a high fraction of
internal (relative to external) noise.
Key words:
amblyopia; noise; classification image; psychophysics; detection; position discrimination
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/2372522-05$05.00/0