Neural Correlates of Sensory Eye Dominance in Human Visual White Matter Tracts

eNeuro. 2022 Nov 23;9(6):ENEURO.0232-22.2022. doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0232-22.2022. Print 2022 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

A significant proportion of the human neurotypical population exhibits some degree of sensory eye dominance (SED), referring to the brain's preferential processing of one eye's input versus another. The neural substrates underlying this functional imbalance are not well known. Here, we investigated the relationship between visual white matter tract properties and SED in the human neurotypical population. Observers' performance on two commonly used dichoptic tasks were used to index SED, along with performance on a third task to address a functional implication of binocular imbalance: stereovision. We show that diffusivity metrics of the optic radiations (ORs) well predict behavioral SED metrics. We found no relationship between SED and stereosensitivity. Our data suggest that SED is not simply reflected by gray matter structural and functional alterations, as often suggested, but relates, at least in part to the microstructural properties of thalamocortical white matter.

Keywords: binocular vision; eye dominance; imaging; stereovision; white matter.

MeSH terms

  • Dominance, Ocular*
  • Gray Matter / diagnostic imaging
  • Humans
  • Photic Stimulation
  • Vision, Binocular
  • White Matter* / diagnostic imaging