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A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms

PURPOSE: Peripheral prisms (p-prisms) shift peripheral portions of the visual field of one eye, providing visual field expansion for patients with hemianopia. However, patients rarely show adaption to the shift, incorrectly localizing objects viewed within the p-prisms. A pilot evaluation of a novel...

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Autores principales: Houston, Kevin E., Bowers, Alex R., Fu, Xianping, Liu, Rui, Goldstein, Robert B., Churchill, Jeff, Wiegand, Jean-Paul, Soo, Tim, Tang, Qu, Peli, Eli
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4771076/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26933522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/tvst.5.1.9
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author Houston, Kevin E.
Bowers, Alex R.
Fu, Xianping
Liu, Rui
Goldstein, Robert B.
Churchill, Jeff
Wiegand, Jean-Paul
Soo, Tim
Tang, Qu
Peli, Eli
author_facet Houston, Kevin E.
Bowers, Alex R.
Fu, Xianping
Liu, Rui
Goldstein, Robert B.
Churchill, Jeff
Wiegand, Jean-Paul
Soo, Tim
Tang, Qu
Peli, Eli
author_sort Houston, Kevin E.
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Peripheral prisms (p-prisms) shift peripheral portions of the visual field of one eye, providing visual field expansion for patients with hemianopia. However, patients rarely show adaption to the shift, incorrectly localizing objects viewed within the p-prisms. A pilot evaluation of a novel computerized perceptual-motor training program aiming to promote p-prism adaption was conducted. METHODS: Thirteen patients with hemianopia fitted with 57Δ oblique p-prisms completed the training protocol. They attended six 1-hour visits reaching and touching peripheral checkerboard stimuli presented over videos of driving scenes while fixating a central target. Performance was measured at each visit and after 3 months. RESULTS: There was a significant reduction in touch error (P = 0.01) for p-prism zone stimuli from pretraining median of 16.6° (IQR 12.1°–19.6°) to 2.7° ( IQR 1.0°–8.5°) at the end of training. P-prism zone reaction times did not change significantly with training (P > 0.05). P-prism zone detection improved significantly (P = 0.01) from a pretraining median 70% (IQR 50%–88%) to 95% at the end of training (IQR 73%–98%). Three months after training improvements had regressed but performance was still better than pretraining. CONCLUSIONS: Improved pointing accuracy for stimuli detected in prism-expanded vision of patients with hemianopia wearing 57Δ oblique p-prisms is possible and training appears to further improve detection. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: This is the first use of this novel software to train adaptation of visual direction in patients with hemianopia wearing peripheral prisms.
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spelling pubmed-47710762016-03-01 A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms Houston, Kevin E. Bowers, Alex R. Fu, Xianping Liu, Rui Goldstein, Robert B. Churchill, Jeff Wiegand, Jean-Paul Soo, Tim Tang, Qu Peli, Eli Transl Vis Sci Technol Articles PURPOSE: Peripheral prisms (p-prisms) shift peripheral portions of the visual field of one eye, providing visual field expansion for patients with hemianopia. However, patients rarely show adaption to the shift, incorrectly localizing objects viewed within the p-prisms. A pilot evaluation of a novel computerized perceptual-motor training program aiming to promote p-prism adaption was conducted. METHODS: Thirteen patients with hemianopia fitted with 57Δ oblique p-prisms completed the training protocol. They attended six 1-hour visits reaching and touching peripheral checkerboard stimuli presented over videos of driving scenes while fixating a central target. Performance was measured at each visit and after 3 months. RESULTS: There was a significant reduction in touch error (P = 0.01) for p-prism zone stimuli from pretraining median of 16.6° (IQR 12.1°–19.6°) to 2.7° ( IQR 1.0°–8.5°) at the end of training. P-prism zone reaction times did not change significantly with training (P > 0.05). P-prism zone detection improved significantly (P = 0.01) from a pretraining median 70% (IQR 50%–88%) to 95% at the end of training (IQR 73%–98%). Three months after training improvements had regressed but performance was still better than pretraining. CONCLUSIONS: Improved pointing accuracy for stimuli detected in prism-expanded vision of patients with hemianopia wearing 57Δ oblique p-prisms is possible and training appears to further improve detection. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: This is the first use of this novel software to train adaptation of visual direction in patients with hemianopia wearing peripheral prisms. The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 2016-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4771076/ /pubmed/26933522 http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/tvst.5.1.9 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Houston, Kevin E.
Bowers, Alex R.
Fu, Xianping
Liu, Rui
Goldstein, Robert B.
Churchill, Jeff
Wiegand, Jean-Paul
Soo, Tim
Tang, Qu
Peli, Eli
A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms
title A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms
title_full A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms
title_fullStr A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms
title_full_unstemmed A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms
title_short A Pilot Study of Perceptual-Motor Training for Peripheral Prisms
title_sort pilot study of perceptual-motor training for peripheral prisms
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4771076/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26933522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/tvst.5.1.9
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