Amblyopia is a deficit that arises from abnormal visual experience early in life, most commonly when the two eyes are not aligned (strabismus) or have unequal refractive error (anisometropia). It has long been thought to develop into a permanent deficit unless properly treated early in life; however, recent studies call this into question [1-8]. Adult amblyopes can recover some visual functions. Thus, amblyopia provides a useful model for understanding how to unlock adult neural plasticity. Our main aim is to develop new interventions for restoring visual acuity and stereopsis in adults with amblyopia by embedding visual training in active and rewarding visuomotor tasks that require stereopsis. Our work during the current grant period indicates that playing action-packed video games enhances several aspects of vision in amblyopic adults. Training either monocularly or under dichoptic conditions results in improved visual acuity and reduced suppression in adults with amblyopia. However, it is now clear that both perceptual learning (PL) and videogame play (VGP), whether monocular or dichoptic, result in only a modest improvement in visual acuity (by one to two lines), and only limited improvement in stereopsis [1,3-8]. Much recent work has focused on the role of binocular suppression, as the key to recovering visual functions in amblyopia. Specifically, it has been suggested that treatment should be dichoptic - and aimed at eliminating suppression - rather than monocular [5-8]. However, our pilot studies call this approach into question, and suggest a more direct approach to improving both visual acuity and stereopsis: training under 3D conditions. By forcing the two eyes to coordinate and integrate their signal in the service of a common output, stereopsis provides a unique common teaching signal to the two eyes that may be central to overcoming amblyopia. Our emphasis on stereopsis is novel, but it is based on: (1) our pilot data, showing that in adults with amblyopia training stereopsis directly resulted not only in improved stereopsis, but also in improved visual acuity and contrast sensitivity, as well as reduced inter-ocular suppression and (2) the loss of stereopsis has demonstrable negative effects on everyday activities that can significantly impact individual's quality of life as well as limit their career choices and activities. The most noticeble qualitative deficit associated with amblyopia is impaired or complete loss of stereoscopic depth perception. Thus, the Aims of this proposal are: 1) To develop an integrated, immersive 3D videogame training program for adults with amblyopia; 2) Develop a battery of outcome measures to evaluate the effectiveness, mechanisms and real world impact of training 3) Evaluate the effectiveness of direct training of stereopsis on vision recovery in adult amblyopes.

Public Health Relevance

Amblyopia is a visual deficit due to abnormal early visual experience. It has long been thought to develop into a permanent deficit unless properly treated early in life; however, recent studies show that adult amblyopes can recover some visual functions. Thus, amblyopia provides a useful model for understanding how to unlock adult neural plasticity. Based on our pilot studies we propose to develop and assess the efficacy of an integrated, immersive 3D videogame training program to recover visual acuity and stereopsis in adults with amblyopia, and to directly compare it with dichoptic (2D) training aimed at eliminating suppression.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01EY020976-05
Application #
9145740
Study Section
Bioengineering of Neuroscience, Vision and Low Vision Technologies Study Section (BNVT)
Program Officer
Araj, Houmam H
Project Start
2010-09-01
Project End
2019-08-31
Budget Start
2016-09-01
Budget End
2017-08-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
$628,538
Indirect Cost
$191,937
Name
University of California Berkeley
Department
Type
Schools of Optometry/Ophthalmol
DUNS #
124726725
City
Berkeley
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94704
Coates, Daniel R; Levi, Dennis M; Touch, Phanith et al. (2018) Foveal Crowding Resolved. Sci Rep 8:9177
Gambacorta, Christina; Ding, Jian; McKee, Suzanne P et al. (2018) Both saccadic and manual responses in the amblyopic eye of strabismics are irreducibly delayed. J Vis 18:20
Gambacorta, Christina; Nahum, Mor; Vedamurthy, Indu et al. (2018) An action video game for the treatment of amblyopia in children: A feasibility study. Vision Res 148:1-14
Li, Roger W; Tran, Kenneth D; Bui, John K et al. (2018) Improving Adult Amblyopic Vision with Stereoscopic 3-Dimensional Video Games. Ophthalmology 125:1660-1662
Chopin, Adrien; Levi, Dennis M; Bavelier, Daphné (2017) Dressmakers show enhanced stereoscopic vision. Sci Rep 7:3435
Ding, Jian; Levi, Dennis M (2017) Binocular combination of luminance profiles. J Vis 17:4
Chopin, Adrien; Levi, Dennis; Knill, David et al. (2016) The absolute disparity anomaly and the mechanism of relative disparities. J Vis 16:2
Zomet, Ativ; Polat, Uri; Levi, Dennis M (2016) Noise and the Perceptual Filling-in effect. Sci Rep 6:24938
Ding, Jian; Levi, Dennis M (2016) Binocular contrast discrimination needs monocular multiplicative noise. J Vis 16:12
Vedamurthy, Indu; Knill, David C; Huang, Samuel J et al. (2016) Recovering stereo vision by squashing virtual bugs in a virtual reality environment. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 371:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 28 publications