Aerobic Exercise Effects on Ocular Dominance Plasticity with a Phase Combination Task in Human Adults

Several studies have shown that short-term monocular patching can induce ocular dominance plasticity in normal adults, in which the patched eye becomes stronger in binocular viewing. There is a recent study showing that exercise enhances this plasticity effect when assessed with binocular rivalry. W...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Neural plasticity. - 1998. - 2017(2017) vom: 01., Seite 4780876
Auteur principal: Zhou, Jiawei (Auteur)
Autres auteurs: Reynaud, Alexandre, Hess, Robert F
Format: Article en ligne
Langue:English
Publié: 2017
Accès à la collection:Neural plasticity
Sujets:Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Description
Résumé:Several studies have shown that short-term monocular patching can induce ocular dominance plasticity in normal adults, in which the patched eye becomes stronger in binocular viewing. There is a recent study showing that exercise enhances this plasticity effect when assessed with binocular rivalry. We address one question, is this enhancement from exercise a general effect such that it is seen for measures of binocular processing other than that revealed using binocular rivalry? Using a binocular phase combination task in which we directly measure each eye's contribution to the binocularly fused percept, we show no additional effect of exercise after short-term monocular occlusion and argue that the enhancement of ocular dominance plasticity from exercise could not be demonstrated with our approach
Description:Date Completed 20.09.2017
Date Revised 13.11.2018
published: Print-Electronic
Citation Status MEDLINE
ISSN:1687-5443
DOI:10.1155/2017/4780876