Stereopsis recovery

Eye patches may strengthen the weaker eye but fail to stimulate binocular vision and stereopsis, which may sometimes be recovered by different means.

Stereopsis recovery, also recovery from stereoblindness, is the phenomenon of a stereoblind person gaining partial or full ability of stereo vision (stereopsis).

Recovering stereo vision as far as possible has long been established as an approach to the therapeutic treatment of stereoblind patients. Treatment aims to recover stereo vision in very young children, as well as in patients who had acquired but lost their ability for stereopsis due to a medical condition. In contrast, this aim has normally not been present in the treatment of those who missed out on learning stereopsis during their first few years of life. In fact, the acquisition of binocular and stereo vision was long thought to be impossible unless the person acquired this skill during a critical period in infancy and early childhood.[1] This hypothesis normally went unquestioned and has formed the basis for the therapeutic approaches to binocular disorders for decades. It has been put in doubt in recent years. In particular since studies on stereopsis recovery began to appear in scientific journals and it became publicly known that neuroscientist Susan R. Barry achieved stereopsis well into adulthood, that assumption is in retrospect considered to have held the status of a scientific dogma.[2][3][4][5]

Very recently, there has been a rise in scientific investigations into stereopsis recovery in adults and youths who have had no stereo vision before. While it has now been shown that an adult may gain stereopsis, it is currently not yet possible to predict how likely a stereoblind person is to do so, nor is there general agreement on the best therapeutic procedure. Also the possible implications for the treatment of children with infantile esotropia are still under study.

  1. ^ See for example: Uri Polat (2008). "Restoration of underdeveloped cortical functions: Evidence from treatment of adult amblyopia". Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience. 26 (4–5): 413–424. PMID 18997316.
  2. ^ Barry, Susan R. (2009). Fixing My Gaze: A Scientist's Journey into Seeing in Three Dimensions. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02073-7.
  3. ^ "[…] The book's main contribution, however, is exposing the wrong-headed dogma that acuity and binocular vision can be restored only during a critical developmental period." —New England Journal of Medicine. (See introductory pages of: Susan R. Barry (2009) Fixing My Gaze.)
  4. ^ "[…] Part memoir and part science, Fixing My Gaze is a fitting tribute to the determination of a patient and her optometrist in challenging conventional wisdom and dogma." —Journal of Behavioral Optometry. (See introductory pages of: Susan R. Barry (2009) Fixing My Gaze.)
  5. ^ Andrew T. Astle; Paul V. McGraw; Ben S. Webb (2011). "Myth exploded: Recovery of stereo acuity in adults with amblyopia". BMJ Case Reports. 2011 (feb21 2): bcr0720103143. doi:10.1136/bcr.07.2010.3143. PMC 3062842. PMID 22707543.