Development of Relative Disparity Sensitivity in Human Visual Cortex

作者:Norcia Anthony M*; Gerhard Holly E; Meredith Wesley J
来源:Journal of Neuroscience, 2017, 37(23): 5608-5619.
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3570-16.2017

摘要

Stereopsis is the primary cue underlying our ability to make fine depth judgments. In adults, depth discriminations are supported largely by relative rather than absolute binocular disparity, and depth is perceived primarily for horizontal rather than vertical disparities. Although human infants begin to exhibit disparity-specific responses between 3 and 5 months of age, it is not known how relative disparity mechanisms develop. Here we show that the specialization for relative disparity is highly immature in 4- to 6-month-old infants but is adult-like in 4- to 7-year-old children. Disparity-tuning functions for horizontal and vertical disparities were measured using the visual evoked potential. Infant relative disparity thresholds, unlike those of adults, were equal for vertical and horizontal disparities. Their horizontal disparity thresholds were a factor of similar to 10 higher than adults, but their vertical disparity thresholds differed by a factor of only similar to 4. Horizontal relative disparity thresholds for 4- to 7-year-old children were comparable with those of adults at similar to 0.5 arcmin. To test whether infant immaturity was due to spatial limitations or insensitivity to interocular correlation, highly suprathreshold horizontal and vertical disparities were presented in alternate regions of the display, and the interocular correlation of the interdigitated regions was varied from 0% to 100%. This manipulation regulated the availability of coarse-scale relative disparity cues. Adult and infant responses both increased with increasing interocular correlation by similar magnitudes, but adult responses increased much more for horizontal disparities, further evidence for qualitatively immature stereopsis based on relative disparity at 4-6 months of age.

  • 出版日期2017-6-7