Results 211 to 220 of about 1,894 (248)
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OCULAR DOMINANCE AND AMBLYOPIA

Optometry and Vision Science, 1975
ABSTRACT Occular dominance, as measured in sighting tests involves a temporary suppression of the input from the non‐dominant eye in order to avoid diplopia. Amblyopia ex anopsia may be viewed as a long term suppression of the input from one eye for the same reason. In the absence of amisometropia.
S, Coren, R H, Duckman
openaire   +2 more sources

A role for ocular dominance in binocular integration

Current Biology, 2023
Neurons in the primate primary visual cortex (V1) combine left- and right-eye information to form a binocular output. Controversy surrounds whether ocular dominance, the preference of these neurons for one eye over the other, is functionally relevant. Here, we demonstrate that ocular dominance impacts gain control during binocular combination.
Blake A. Mitchell   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Ocular dominance columns in strabismus

Visual Neuroscience, 2006
During development, the projection from the lateral geniculate nucleus to striate cortex becomes segregated into monocular regions called ocular dominance columns. Prior studies in cats have suggested that experimental strabismus or alternating monocular occlusion increases the width and segregation of columns.
Adams, Daniel Lewis, J. HORTON
openaire   +3 more sources

Ocular Dominance and Perceptual Asymmetry

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1967
Two experiments were performed to determine the relation of sighting and acuity dominance to tachistoscopic recognition. In both, single-letter material was exposed binocularly to either the left or right of fixation at brief durations. In Exp. I ( N = 32) visual field differences in recognition were unrelated to sighting dominance. The results of Exp.
T, Hayashi, M P, Bryden
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A THEORY OF OCULAR DOMINANCE

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1951
DOMINANCE in the broadest sense consists of any sort of physiological preeminence, priority or preferential activity of one member of any bilateral pair of structures in the body. Thus, to write right handed or left handed is to have a dominant hand.
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Dissociating ocular dominance column development and ocular dominance plasticity: a neurotrophic model

Biological Cybernetics, 2002
Recent experimental data indicate that both neurotrophic factors (NTFs) and intracortical inhibitory circuitry are implicated in the development and plasticity of ocular dominance columns. We extend a neurotrophic model of developmental synaptic plasticity, which previously failed to account correctly for the differences between monocular deprivation ...
Terry Elliott, Nigel R. Shadbolt
openaire   +3 more sources

Patterns of ocular dominance.

American journal of optometry and archives of American Academy of Optometry, 1973
ABSTRACT The dominant q e has been d d n d as the eve which is used to sight with. or whose input is hvond when there is conflicting information to the two eyes. Many investigators report diffemces in measured dominance as a function of the tat used. Fifty‐seven normal subjects were teed on thinern different tats for ocular dominance.
S, Coren, C P, Kaplan
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OCULAR DOMINANCE

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1936
Functional asymmetry within the visual apparatus is well illustrated by the difference in the behavior of the two eyes during binocular activity. Thus, the dominant or master eye directs its visual axis to a point in space, while its fellow, the nondominant eye, consummates the act of binocular central fixation by adjusting itself so that corresponding
openaire   +1 more source

Ocular dominance testing

International Contact Lens Clinic, 1996
Abstract Clinicians typically apply the distance correction to the dominant sighting eye when fitting monovision contact lenses on presbyopic patients. This study investigates if this form of dominance testing correlates with a second type of dominance testing, the eye that will accept the least plus power when viewing a distance target binocularly ...
Lance E. Malott   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

OCULAR DOMINANCE AND HANDEDNESS

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1954
To the Editor: —We appreciate your thoughtful discussion of our paper, published in the November, 1953, issue of theArchives. Our original paper was longer and contained discussions of the points you have made. In shortening it for publication, we had to omit many interesting, but not "central," portions of the material.
openaire   +2 more sources

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