Learning to identify near-acuity letters, either with or without flankers, results in improved letter size and spacing limits in adults with amblyopia

Amblyopia is a developmental abnormality that results in deficits for a wide range of visual tasks, most notably, the reduced ability to see fine details, the loss in contrast sensitivity especially for small objects and the difficulty in seeing objects in clutter (crowding). The primary goal of thi...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2012-04, Vol.7 (4), p.e35829-e35829
Hauptverfasser: Chung, Susana T L, Li, Roger W, Levi, Dennis M
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Li, Roger W
Levi, Dennis M
description Amblyopia is a developmental abnormality that results in deficits for a wide range of visual tasks, most notably, the reduced ability to see fine details, the loss in contrast sensitivity especially for small objects and the difficulty in seeing objects in clutter (crowding). The primary goal of this study was to evaluate whether crowding can be ameliorated in adults with amblyopia through perceptual learning using a flanked letter identification task that was designed to reduce crowding, and if so, whether the improvements transfer to untrained visual functions: visual acuity, contrast sensitivity and the size of visual span (the amount of information obtained in one fixation). To evaluate whether the improvements following this training task were specific to training with flankers, we also trained another group of adult observers with amblyopia using a single letter identification task that was designed to improve letter contrast sensitivity, not crowding. Following 10,000 trials of training, both groups of observers showed improvements in the respective training task. The improvements generalized to improved visual acuity, letter contrast sensitivity, size of the visual span, and reduced crowding. The magnitude of the improvement for each of these measurements was similar in the two training groups. Perceptual learning regimens aimed at reducing crowding or improving letter contrast sensitivity are both effective in improving visual acuity, contrast sensitivity for near-acuity objects and reducing the crowding effect, and could be useful as a clinical treatment for amblyopia.
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subjects Acuity
Adult
Adults
Amblyopia
Amblyopia - physiopathology
Amblyopia - therapy
Biology
Clinical trials
Clutter
Contrast Sensitivity
Crowding
Female
Humans
Identification
Learning
Male
Medicine
Neurosciences
Object recognition
Observers
Optometry
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Perceptual learning
Photic Stimulation
Psychophysics
Reading
Sensitivity
Sensory Thresholds
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Training
Transfer (Psychology)
Visual Acuity
Visual task performance
Visual tasks
Young Adult
title Learning to identify near-acuity letters, either with or without flankers, results in improved letter size and spacing limits in adults with amblyopia
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