Abstract

Visual acuity can be measured in many different ways, including with letters and Vernier offsets. Prior psychophysical work has suggested that the two acuities are strongly linked given that they both depend strongly on retinal eccentricity and both are similarly affected in amblyopia. Here we used high-density EEG recordings to ask whether the underlying neural sources are common as suggested by the psychophysics or distinct. To measure visual acuity for letters, we recorded evoked potentials to 3 Hz alternations between intact and scrambled text comprised of letters of varying size. To measure visual acuity for Vernier offsets, we recorded evoked potentials to 3 Hz alternations between bar gratings with and without a set of Vernier offsets. Both alternation types elicited robust activity at the 3 Hz stimulus frequency that scaled in amplitude with both letter and offset size, starting near threshold. Letter and Vernier offset responses differed in both their scalp topography and temporal dynamics. The earliest evoked responses to letters occurred on lateral occipital visual areas, predominantly over the left hemisphere. Later responses were measured at electrodes over early visual cortex, suggesting that letter structure is first extracted in second-tier extra-striate areas and that responses over early visual areas are due to feedback. Responses to Vernier offsets, by contrast, occurred first at medial occipital electrodes, with responses at later time-points being more broadly distributed—consistent with feedforward pathway mediation. The previously observed commonalities between letter and Vernier acuity may be due to common bottlenecks in early visual cortex but not because the two tasks are subserved by a common network of visual areas.

Highlights

  • Visual acuity can be measured in many different ways, including with letters and Vernier offsets

  • Cortical responses to near threshold letters differ from those elicited by Vernier offsets in their response topography and temporal dynamics, indicating that they are generated by different underlying sources

  • Source analysis suggests that the structure of letters is first extracted in a higher-order visual area, such as the Visual Word Form Area (VWFA) or ­IOG44,45, and that the later activity seen on posterior electrodes may be the result of feedback

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Summary

Introduction

Visual acuity can be measured in many different ways, including with letters and Vernier offsets. To measure visual acuity for Vernier offsets, we recorded evoked potentials to 3 Hz alternations between bar gratings with and without a set of Vernier offsets. Both alternation types elicited robust activity at the 3 Hz stimulus frequency that scaled in amplitude with both letter and offset size, starting near threshold. Recent fMRI-informed source imaging s­ tudies[34,35,36,37,38] have measured Steady State Visual Evoked Potentials (SSVEPs) to similar stimuli These studies used frequency-domain ­analysis[14] to isolate Vernier-related activity and Scientific Reports | (2020) 10:15449. Found widespread Vernier-related activity throughout early visual cortex and mid-level extra-striate visual areas, consistent with the previously documented sensitivity to Vernier offsets in early visual areas of the macaque

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