Journal article

Center-surround visual motion processing in migraine

J Battista, DR Badcock, AM McKendrick

Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science | Published : 2010

Abstract

PURPOSE. It has been proposed that reduced cortical inhibition might be a key feature of migraine. Here the authors compared migraine and control group performance for two visual motion tasks in which performance was considered to reflect center-surround inhibitory processes. These tasks use the observations that healthy young observers require longer stimulus durations to detect the direction of motion of larger higher contrast stimuli, and these stimuli also elicit weaker motion aftereffect (MAE) strength. Both observations are considered to arise from center-surround inhibition. METHODS. The authors measured stimulus duration thresholds for detecting the direction of motion of stimuli of ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers