Abstract

Two binocular sources of information serve motion-in-depth (MID) perception: changes in disparity over time (CD), and interocular velocity differences (IOVD). While CD requires the computation of small spatial disparities, IOVD could be computed from a much lower-resolution signal. IOVD signals therefore might still be available under conditions of binocular vision impairment (BVI) with limited or no stereopsis, for example, amblyopia. Sensitivity to CD and IOVD was measured in adults who had undergone therapy to correct optical misalignment or amblyopia in childhood (n = 16), as well as normal vision controls with good stereoacuity (n = 8). Observers discriminated the interval containing a smoothly oscillating MID "test" stimulus from a "control" stimulus in a two-interval forced choice paradigm. Of the BVI observers with no static stereoacuity (n = 9), one displayed evidence for sensitivity to IOVD only, while there was otherwise no sensitivity for either CD or IOVD in the group. Generally, BVI observers with measurable stereoacuity (n = 7) displayed a pattern resembling the control group: showing a similar sensitivity for both cues. A neutral density filter placed in front of the fixing eye in a subset of BVI observers did not improve performance. In one BVI observer there was preserved sensitivity to IOVD but not CD, though overall only those BVI observers with at least gross stereopsis were able to detect disparity- or velocity-based cues to MID. The results imply that these logically distinct information sources are somehow coupled, and in some cases BVI observers with no stereopsis may still retain sensitivity to IOVD.

Highlights

  • Maloney RT, Kaestner M, Bruce A et al (2018) Sensitivity to velocity- and disparity- based cues to motion-in-depth with and without spared stereopsis in binocular visual impairment

  • Psychophysical investigations suggest that change in disparity (CD) and interocular velocity differences (IOVD) have distinct spatiotemporal properties,[8,9,10,11,12] and individual observers appear to weigh the two cues differently in MID perception, with some favoring one cue over the other.[13,14,15]

  • In our binocular vision impairment (BVI) sample, we found that observers with no measurable static stereopsis generally displayed no sensitivity for either CD or IOVD cues, except for one observer who showed greater than chance sensitivity to IOVD, but not CD

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Summary

Introduction

Maloney RT, Kaestner M, Bruce A et al (2018) Sensitivity to velocity- and disparity- based cues to motion-in-depth with and without spared stereopsis in binocular visual impairment. Two binocular sources of information serve motion-in-depth (MID) perception: changes in disparity over time (CD), and interocular velocity differences (IOVD). While CD requires the computation of small spatial disparities, IOVD could be computed from a much lower-resolution signal. IOVD signals might still be available under conditions of binocular vision impairment (BVI) with limited or no stereopsis, for example, amblyopia

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