Optometry and Vision Sciences - Theses

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    Receptive field analysis in cat primary visual cortex
    Sun, Shi Hai ( 2019)
    Characterising receptive fields (RFs) in the primary visual cortex (V1) is central to understanding how neurons and neural circuits process visual information. The goal of this thesis is to systemically compare the two most robust RF characterisation techniques available. The best performing technique will then be used to correlate spatial RFs to two fundamental neuronal properties in V1: cell classification (using extracellular spike identification); and contrast adaptation. I recorded (extracellularly) and estimated the RFs of anaesthetised cat V1 neurons in response to white-Gaussian noise (WGN) using 32-channel array probes. Single units were characterised using the generalised quadratic model (GQM), which is based on prior knowledge and assumptions about cortical processing, and the nonlinear input model (NIM), which is a more physiologically based parametric modelling framework. Qualitatively, the variability between the two models increased as the number of required filters increased. I also compared the performance of the two models quantitatively and found that it is better to use the more parametric framework of the NIM for RF characterisation than the GQM, though those advantages depend somewhat on the availability of spiking data. In the next part of my thesis, I extracted the extracellular spikes of V1 neurons and correlated their shapes to their spatial RFs extracted using the NIM. Extracellular spike waveforms from recordings in V1 have traditionally consisted of negative first phases. I identified these spike types in my data, but I show that there are also distinct classes of spikes with positive first phases. The RFs and spiking characteristics of these different spike waveform types were examined, and I found that the negative spiking units showed characteristics typical of cortical cells (i.e. simple and complex cell types) and the positive first phase spiking units showed characteristics typical of thalamic cells, which provide the input to cortex. To further investigate this theory, I recorded from V1 before and after cortical silencing, and found that only positive first phase spikes remained. This provides strong evidence in support of the theory that the positive first phase spikes are derived from the thalamic input fibres to the cortex. For the final part of the project I recovered the RFs (using NIM) of neurons during adaptation to drifting gratings (i.e. contrast adaptation). There were no consistent changes in the spatial RFs following contrast adaptation for either simple or complex cells. I also observed that the responses to WGN images of adapted units were significantly slower than the control units (i.e. response latency was increased). However, there were several limitations that arose from this project, which are discussed in detail. The results of my work have demonstrated three aspects of V1 processing: (1) the NIM is better than the GQM for RF characterisation; (2) some extracellular positive first phase spiking units may correspond to recordings from thalamic axons projecting to V1; and (3) contrast adaptation has no effect on the spatial RFs, but it does have an effect on the temporal RFs of cortical V1 neurons.
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    The effects of ageing on ocular surface integrity
    De Silva, Manikkuwadura Eranda Harshan ( 2019)
    Purpose: Ageing is recognised as a major risk factor for several ocular pathologies, including dry eye disease. The aim of this thesis was to characterise the specific effect of ageing on key ocular surface parameters, in humans and mice. We hypothesised that there would be common ageing effects in both species that paralleled the pathophysiological features observed in dry eye disease. Method: The animal study involved healthy C57BL/6 female mice, aged 2 months (young, n=10) and 22 months (aged, n=10). Clinical assessments included measurements of corneal sensitivity (Cochet-Bonnet aesthesiometry, which is a contact corneal aesthesiometer), tear secretion (Phenol red thread test), tear film osmolarity (TearLab osmometer) and corneal thickness (optical coherence tomography). The anatomical integrity of the corneal nerves was examined ex vivo (using immunohistochemistry) by quantifying nerve density in the superficial epithelium (superficial terminals) and sub-basal plexus. The density and tree area of resident epithelial dendritic cells (DCs) were assessed using immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. For the clinical study, 37 healthy male and female participants (15 male participants and 22 female participants) were recruited, and divided into four age categories: 20-35 years, 36-50 years, 51-65 years, and >65 years. Participants underwent a comprehensive characterisation of ocular surface health, including quantification of tear osmolarity, blink rate, slit lamp biomicroscopy and corneal sensitivity (using non-contact corneal aesthesiometry). In vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM) was performed to quantify a range of corneal nerve parameters, microneuroma density and DC density, in the central and peripheral cornea. Results: In the animal study, aged mice had significantly higher tear secretion, lower corneal sensitivity and a thicker corneal stroma but thinner epithelium compared with young mice. There was no significant inter-group difference for tear osmolarity. Aged mice showed a significantly lower cornea nerve density, in both the superficial terminals and sub-basal plexus, relative to young mice. DC density and morphology were similar in both age groups. In the human study, older age was associated with a reduction in central corneal sensitivity to a room temperature air stimulus, but not to a cold temperature stimulus. Tear osmolarity remained within normative ranges (<308mOsmol/L) in all age groups, although it was relatively higher in this parameter amongst individuals aged 36 to 50 years, compared to the 20 to 35 year olds (p = 0.0047). A range of ocular surface parameters, including corneal sub-basal nerve plexus density, DC density and microneuroma density were not subject to ageing effects but showed eccentricity-dependent differences. Blink rate and most standard clinical biomicroscopic findings were not significantly different between age groups. Conclusion: Ageing has differential effects on ocular surface parameters. A reduction in corneal sensitivity, and a relative maintenance of corneal DC density, was evident in older eyes in both species. The apparently disparate findings in relation to corneal nerve density between mice and humans may relate to the established limitations of in vivo imaging techniques, particularly with respect to image resolution. These findings, relating to ocular surface changes with physiological ageing, are of value for understanding the potential contribution of the ageing process to ocular surface diseases.
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    Retinal neurovascular coupling in streptozotocin diabetic rats
    Wang, Joe Yuchi ( 2019)
    Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a significant cause of vision impairment worldwide, and it is projected to incur a rising global disease burden. Although the pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy had been historically characterised as a vascular disease, there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that DR is also a process of retinal neurodegeneration. There is also evidence that functional changes occur to the retinal vasculature’s capacity to respond to physiological stimuli, before anatomical changes manifest. Additionally, there is evidence to suggest that neuronal dysfunction precedes anatomical evidence of neurodegeneration in both clinical and experimental studies of diabetes. These findings were examined in Chapter 2, and collectively suggest that functional deficits of both the vascular and neuronal retinal components may be key components of DR pathogenesis. Several research questions were proposed in this thesis in order to further understand vascular and neuronal interactions in the retina, at the earliest stages of diabetes. In order to model an early stage of diabetic disease, 4 weeks of hyperglycaemia was introduced to a cohort of dark Agouti laboratory rats using streptozotocin (STZ). Flickering light was used to stimulate neuronal driven vasodilation in the retina, and the autoregulatory capacity of retinal vasculature was challenged through inhalation of oxygen and carbon dioxide. Electroretinography was conducted to assess retinal function, and the scotopic threshold response (STR) was recorded during gas inhalation as a measure of inner retinal functional response to an autoregulatory challenge. A series of pilot studies were undertaken to optimise the parameters of flicker stimulation, gas delivery, retinal imaging and electroretinography. These materials and methods were described in Chapter 3. Flicker stimulation reliably produced vasodilation of inner retinal arteries and veins, although this response was not significantly affected by 4 weeks of STZ hyperglycaemia. Oxygen and carbon dioxide breathing introduced vasodilation and vasoconstriction of the inner retinal arteries and veins, respectively. The speed of venous vasoconstriction was reduced in STZ animals during oxygen breathing, and carbon dioxide breathing revealed a reduced arterial vasodilatory capacity in STZ animals. These findings were described and discussed in Chapter 4, and they indicate that, despite normal retinal neurovascular coupling, subtle autoregulatory deficits in the retinal vasculature are present at an early stage of diabetes. The oscillatory potentials and STR were found to be reduced after 4 weeks of hyperglycaemia, suggesting a manifest deficit of inner retinal function. Additionally, carbon dioxide breathing introduced an increase in the peak positive STR (pSTR) amplitude in both normal and STZ animals, whereas oxygen breathing resulted in a decrease of pSTR amplitude that was more significant in the STZ cohort. These findings were described and discussed in Chapter 5, and they seem to suggest that that relative inner retinal ischemia may be present early in the course of diabetes. Furthermore, this effect could be exacerbated by vasoconstrictive stimuli. The overall experimental findings suggest that neurovascular coupling is unaffected at an early stage of diabetes, despite findings of inner retinal dysfunction and subtle deficit of vascular autoregulation in the retina. This suggests, in addition to neuronal and vascular activity, that other physiological processes, likely mediated by glial cells, may be implicated in the modulation neurovascular interactions in the retina. These experimental findings and implications were discussed in Chapter 6, as well as study limitations and future directions of research.
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    Illusory motion perception in migraine
    He, Chongyue ( 2019)
    In between attacks, people with migraine report experiencing both visual discomfort and visual illusions induced by stationary high contrast striped patterns. Since both visual illusion and discomfort have been assessed through largely qualitative self-report, it is unclear how their mechanisms might be related with each other. This thesis aimed to investigate whether subjective reports of visual discomfort in people with migraine are associated with the strength of a motion illusion outside attacks. To determine the stimulus for motion illusion strength to be quantified, Experiment 1 measured the physical motion speeds that cancelled the illusory motion effect of five variants of the Fraser-Wilcox illusion in people who do not experience headache. The stimulus type that produced the most robust illusory motion was chosen for subsequent experiments. Experiment 2 compared the motion illusion strength between people with migraine with aura, people with migraine without aura, and non-headache control participants. The relationship between motion illusion strength and self-reported frequency of experiencing visual discomfort in daily life was also investigated. The results indicated that subjective visual discomfort was elevated in people with migraine with aura but that visual discomfort was not accompanied by greater motion illusion strength. These findings suggest that susceptibility to daily visual discomfort is not related to perceived speed of the motion illusion. Experiment 3 investigated whether motion illusion strength is associated with contrast discrimination threshold and motion sensitivity regardless of migraine status. The results revealed that people with better contrast discrimination, but not motion sensitivity, tended to perceive faster motion illusions. The findings of this thesis verify previous self-reports of increased visual discomfort in people with migraine. The experiments, however, do not support that this self-reported experience is derived from differences in contrast discrimination or motion sensitivity, for the types of stimuli used herein. The Fraser-Wilcox motion illusion does not seem to test the same mechanisms as involved in self-reported visual discomfort.
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    Reversibility of IOP-induced retinal ganglion cell injury in mice
    Zhao, Da ( 2019)
    It is commonly believed that high eye pressure induced retinal ganglion cell injury is irreversible in glaucoma, however current studies suggest otherwise. This thesis developed a glaucoma model in mice to demonstrate that retinal ganglion cells can recover their activity, but only if intervention occurs early. The functional recovery of retinal ganglion cells is associated with changes to the purinergic pathway.
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    The effect of aging on spatial visual process outside the fovea
    Malavita Mohottalalage, Menaka Samanmali Malavita ( 2018)
    Studies have repeatedly shown that physiological aging impacts contextual spatial vision in central vision. Some visual functions are different between foveal and non-foveal vision and we have limited understanding of parafoveal contextual vision in aging. My thesis addressed how healthy aging influences spatial vision in non-foveal areas. Tasks involved in Experiment 1 were visual crowding and surround suppression of contrast detection. In the literature, these functions are often poorly differentiated The experiments described in this thesis investigated the consequences of healthy aging on visual crowding and surround suppression of contrast detection and determined whether such tasks were related to visuospatial attention as measured by visual search. Surround suppression of contrast detection increased in healthy older adults whereas visual crowding was relatively unchanged, supporting the existing evidence that crowding and suppression are distinct phenomena. Older adults showed longer reaction times for visual search, but visual search was not predicted by performance in either the crowding or surround suppression task in either age group. Although attention is considered important mechanistically for both visual search and visual crowding, the results did not reveal a role for attention in the magnitude of crowding. Since visual crowding relatively remained unchanged in older adults, Experiment 2 and 3 continued to explore surround suppression of contrast detection. Contrast detection, however, does not change across the visual field in a globally equivalent fashion, instead there are orientation biases that depend on eccentricity. The effect of surround on these anisotropies are unknown. Experiment 2 investigated if there are aspects related to stimulus orientation of surround suppression of contrast detection at different eccentricities and the role of centre-surround orientation using psychophysical methods. The results indicated that suppression is increased for horizontal centre-surround stimuli at 6ᵒ eccentricity while radial stimulus showed increased suppression at 15ᵒ eccentricity. Suppression was greater for a horizontal centre than for a vertical centre regardless of its surround orientation (parallel or orthogonal) at 6ᵒ and a radial centre was more susceptible for suppression than a tangential centre only for parallel surround condition at 15ᵒ. Experiment 3 determined if biases of suppression strength according to stimulus orientation and retinal eccentricity are observed in older adults. Orientation anisotropy of surround suppression changed from a horizontal bias to a radial bias moving from 6ᵒ to 15ᵒ in older groups indicating similar eccentricity dependency of orientation biases of surround suppression of contrast detection in both young and older adults. The experiments described in this thesis broadened our understanding of how aging effects non-foveal spatial vision. Advanced understanding of the effects of healthy aging in non-foveal vision is not only important for better understand of fundamental aspects of visual perception, but also for developing remediation strategies in diseases such as Age-Related Macular Disease (AMD).
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    Local microvascular reactivity in the regulation of retinal blood flow
    Duan, Angelina ( 2018)
    Although a well-regulated blood supply is important for healthy neural function, the mechanism by which this occurs is still disputed; some studies charge this physiological response solely to the muscular arterioles, whilst others suggest capillaries are involved if not the principal co-ordinators. As this debate arises mostly from animal data, this thesis aims to determine whether the human inner retinal microvasculature, visualised in vivo using flood-illumination adaptive optics imaging, plays a role in modifying blood supply to meet metabolic demand.
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    A structural and functional profile of high myopia as a function of eye size
    Jaworski, Alexandra Anne ( 2018)
    The prevalence of myopia and its associated sight threatening pathology is anticipated to increase, making high myopia a global health concern, especially in our ageing population. Although pathological sequelae and visual dysfunction have been attributed to excessive elongation in the highly myopic eye, a link between axial elongation and visual dysfunction in the absence of significant pathology is less well described. Furthermore, emmetropia and high myopia are variably defined, and in most instances, defined according to refractive error and not eye size. This thesis was designed to define and distinguish emmetropic and highly myopic eyes with regard to axial length and vitreous chamber depth and to apply these definitions to studies exploring the impact of ocular expansion on visual function and ocular structure. The first experiment (Chapter 2) used meta-analysis to predict the axial length (23.47 ± 0.07 mm) and vitreous chamber depth (16.12 ± 0.14 mm) of an emmetropic eye. Based on gender matched studies, male eyes not selected for refractive error were found to be larger with respect to both axial length (+0.52 ± 0.04 mm) and vitreous chamber depth (+0.40 ± 0.04 mm) relative to female eyes. Male emmetropic eyes displayed longer vitreous chamber depths (+0.47 ± 0.15 mm) relative to female emmetropic eyes, but axial lengths of emmetropic eyes did not vary with gender. Linear and non-linear meta-regressions predicted minimum dimensions of -5, -6 and -8 Dioptre (D) eyes, with a – 5 D high myope characterised by an axial length and vitreous chamber depth of at least 24.66 and 16.94 mm, respectively. Refractive errors of -5, -6 and -8 D were selected as they have previously been used to define high myopia in other studies, and were the refractive error groupings investigated in Chapters 3 and 4 of this thesis. Systematic review showed that vitreous chamber depth is presented less frequently than axial length in published literature. This may reflect instrumentation used to perform biometry and suggests that vitreous chamber elongation is mostly assumed but not demonstrated by researchers. In such cases, the role of posterior segment elongation in the development of structural and/or functional sequelae is hypothetical. The second experiment (Chapter 3) contrasted luminance and S-cone pathway spatial processing of axial high myopes ( -8 D) and emmetropes using psychophysical tools. Luminance and S-cone pathways were both probed to discriminate between pathway selective and non-selective visual dysfunction, given the known redundancy of neuronal elements comprising the S-cone pathway and reports of altered colour vision in high myopia. High spatial frequency loss and increased critical area indicated increased separation of neural elements. Critical area enlargement was consistent with a non-uniform posterior pole model of ocular expansion. Models previously reported in the literature have included non-uniform, posterior pole and global expansion. However, unlike the wrok presented here, these studies did not assess visual function with regards to vitreous chamber depth. Reduced contrast sensitivity for spatial summation tasks in the presence of retained sensitivity at lower spatial frequencies suggested non-selective post-receptoral dysfunction due to ocular enlargement and either normal or enhanced photoreceptor sensitivity. The third experiment (Chapter 4) utilised readily available clinical tools, customised automated perimetry and optical coherence tomography, to investigate structure-function relationships in enlarged highly myopic eyes ( -5 D). Generalised choroidal thinning for the central 4 mm and localised retinal thinning confined to the central ±1 mm were evident for high myopes. Although overall visual sensitivity decreased with increasing eye size, regional relationships between sensitivity and structural thickness or eye size were not evident. However, the nasal region appeared predominantly thinner with ocular enlargement suggesting that it may be more susceptible to visual dysfunction in longer eyes. The finding of marked nasal thinning of the ocular structural layers has been reported previously and is consistent with choroidal watershed zones predominantly affecting the nasal posterior pole. This reduced blood supply could underpin structural and functional changes in eyes demonstrating posterior pole expansion. The findings support that vitreous chamber elongation causes high myopia, visual dysfunction, and generalised choroidal and localised retinal thinning. Psychophysical and available clinical tools supported non-uniform ocular expansion in high myopia, with the nasal region predominantly thinned and potentially at risk of visual dysfunction. Although meta-analysis is not a novel tool, its application to defining emmetropia and high myopes with regards to axial length and vitreous chamber depth is novel, and has application in subsequent research and clinical settings.
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    Origins of feature selectivity in the visual system of two mammalian species
    Mohan, Yamni ( 2018)
    Visual information is transmitted from the retina to the primary visual cortex (V1) through the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). At each stage along this visual pathway, the receptive field properties of neurons are transformed, with sharp feature selectivity originating for the first time in the primary visual cortex. In this thesis, I studied the mechanism underlying the generation of the full range of, as well as the sharpening of, two such feature selectivities - the orientation and spatial frequency tuning of neurons- along the visual pathways of tree shrews and macaques. Undertaking this study in two species helps us examine the mechanisms that may be conserved during evolution. In experiment 1 (chapter 4), I used the differences in spatial scale between the geniculate inputs and the V1 spiking outputs in the optical imaging of intrinsic signals to examine the differences in the preferred orientations of the inputs and outputs in V1 of anaesthetized macaques. I determined that the majority of inputs were tuned to the radial orientation (the orientation of the line joining a point on the visual field to the centre of gaze, or fovea in the macaque). A bias for the radial orientation is already evident in the retina. I suggest that the full range of orientation preferences observed in the outputs are generated from a limited number of broadly tuned channels. In experiment 2 (chapter 5), I explored the mechanism underlying the sharpening of orientation tuning from layer 4 to layer 2/3 in tree shrew V1. I found that the orientation selectivity of layer 2/3 is generated from sharpening the broad biases observed in layer 4 of the cortex. It is likely that intracortical inhibitory connections play a bigger role in sharpening feature selectivity in the tree shrews (and by extension in macaques) compared to cats, where most such studies are undertaken. In experiment 3 (chapter 6), I found that neurons in the visual layers of the superior colliculus (SC), which form part of an alternate pathway to the visual cortices, and those in the LGN and layer 4 of V1 show similar orientation and spatial frequency tuning. Hence, it is likely that neurons in these two pathways inherit their feature selectivity from biases established in the retina. In experiment 4 (chapter 7), I found that unlike the macaques, simple cells in the tree shrew V1 act more as Fourier analysers; i.e., they deconstruct the visual scene into their spatial frequency components. I conclude that the tree shrew has several spatial frequency tuning channels in V1 in comparison. Together, my results suggest that sharp feature selectivity observed in the primary visual cortex may be generated from broad biases that are present sub-cortically. Further, in tree shrews and macaques, where sharpening of feature selectivity occurs from layer 4 to layer 2/3, intracortical mechanisms, such as cross-orientation inhibition also play an important role in elaborating feature selectivity. The full range of orientation and spatial frequency preferences in the cortex may be generated from a limited number of broadly tuned channels in both the macaques and tree shrews. These results indicate that sub-cortical biases play an important role in elaborating feature selectivity within the primary visual cortex.
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    Investigating the functional influence of perceptual stabilisation mechanisms of small eye movements
    Park, So Yun ( 2018)
    Even when we stare intently at an object, our eyes are in constant motion due to small, involuntary eye movements. Despite this, we do not perceive a jittery world as the visual system is able to compensate for the motion that arises and construct a stable visual percept. The thesis explores the need for such compensatory mechanisms by combining phenomenology and psychophysics to determine whether perceptual stabilisation mechanisms can have a measurable influence on visual function..