Abstract

Age related macular degeneration (AMD) is a visual disease that affects elderly population. It entails a progressive loss of central vision whose consequences are dramatic for the patient’s quality of life. Current rehabilitation programs are restricted to technical aids based on visual devices. They only temporarily improve specific visual functions such as reading skills. Considering the rapid increase of the aging population worldwide, it is crucial to intensify clinical research on AMD in order to develop simple and efficient methods that improve the patient’s visual performances in many different contexts. One very promising approach to face this challenge is based on perceptual learning (PL). Through intensive practice, PL can induce neural plasticity in sensory cortices and result in long-lasting enhancements for various perceptual tasks in both normal and visually impaired populations. A growing number of studies showed how appropriate PL protocols improve visual functions in visual disorders, namely amblyopia, presbyopia or myopia. In order to successfully apply these approaches to more severe conditions such as AMD, numerous challenges have to be overcome. Indeed, the overall elderly age of patients and the reduced cortical surface that is devoted to peripheral vision potentially limit neural plasticity in this population. In addition, ocular fixation becomes much less stable because patients have to rely on peripheral fixation spots outside the scotoma whose size keeps on evolving. The aim of this review article is to discuss the recent literature on this topic and to offer a unified approach for developing new rehabilitation programs of AMD using PL. We argue that with an appropriate experimental and training protocol that is adapted to each patient needs, PL can offer fascinating opportunities for the development of simple, non-expensive rehabilitation approaches a large spectrum of visual functions in AMD patients.

Highlights

  • Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of visual impairments in elderly population in western countries and affects several million of people worldwide

  • We first present recent results obtained with perceptual learning (PL) in normal population or with patients suffering from central vision deficits, we describe and discuss the results of very recent studies that applied PL techniques in AMD patients

  • Participants in the first group improved their reading speed by 72%, the second group improved it by 54%, while participants trained with the lexical-decision improved it by 39%, which is significantly lower than the Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP) group

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of visual impairments in elderly population in western countries and affects several million of people worldwide. Maniglia et al (2011) tested a collinear facilitation paradigm at intermediate eccentricities (4◦), and showed that practice on this configuration improved untrained visual functions such as peripheral CS and reduced crowding, in agreement with recent hypotheses supporting the idea that collinear facilitation and crowding might share similar neural substrates (Lev and Polat, 2011) This may have important implications for the rehabilitation of low-vision patients who must use peripheral vision to perform tasks (such as e.g., reading) that are usually processed by the fovea in normal sighted participants.

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