|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Search all papers
|
Center-surround antagonism in spatial vision: Retinal or cortical locus? Gerald Westheimer
ABSTRACT: Mach and Hering had early advanced a model of spatial visual
processing featuring an antagonistic interaction between adjoining areas in the
visual field. Spatial opponency was one of the first findings when single-unit
studies of the retina were begun. Not long afterwards psychophysical
experiments revealed a center-surround organization closely matching that found
in the mammalian retina. It hinged on the demonstration of reduction of
sensitivity in a small patch of the visual field when its surround was changed
from dark to bright. Because such patterns inevitably produce borders,
well-known phenomena of border interaction could be seen as providing
alternative explanations, whose substrate would most likely be in the visual
cortex. These competing viewpoints are discussed especially as they pertain to
the recent demonstration of spatial differences in the center/surround
organization between the normal and affected eyes of amblyopes. To the extent
that most findings favor a retinal site for the psychophysically measured
antaaonism, and that evidence is accumulating for a direct effect on the
mammalian retina of stimulus manipulation during visual development, the
difference in spatial parameters of center/surround antagonism in amblyopia
Suggests that the dysfunction in amblyopia begins already in the retina. (C)
2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
SUGGESTED CITATION:
REQUIRED PUBLISHER STATEMENT:
| |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||