Publications by authors named "M E Poletti"

Eating disorders (EDs) pose significant challenges to mental and physical health, particularly among adolescents and young adults, with the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbating risk factors. Despite advancements in psychosocial and pharmacological treatments, improvements remain limited. Early intervention in EDs, inspired by the model developed for psychosis, emphasizes the importance of timely identification and treatment initiation to improve prognosis.

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Visual perception is characterized by known asymmetries in the visual field; human's visual sensitivity is higher along the horizontal than the vertical meridian, and along the lower than the upper vertical meridian. These asymmetries decrease with decreasing eccentricity from the periphery to the center of gaze, suggesting that they may be absent in the 1-deg foveola, the retinal region used to explore scenes at high-resolution. Using high-precision eyetracking and gaze-contingent display, allowing for accurate control over the stimulated foveolar location despite the continuous eye motion at fixation, we investigated fine visual discrimination at different isoeccentric locations across the foveola and parafovea.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers combined a high-speed external display (360 fps) with an adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope (AOSLO) to enhance human foveal imaging for psychophysics experiments.
  • A custom pupil relay was developed for precise stimulus viewing and was validated to correct refractive errors while achieving a high Strehl ratio, ensuring image clarity.
  • The system achieved excellent eye-tracking capabilities, allowing for accurate localization of visual stimuli and capturing detailed images of the human central fovea, while overcoming previous limitations in temporal and spatial resolution.
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Crowding, the phenomenon of impaired visual discrimination due to nearby objects, has been extensively studied and linked to cortical mechanisms. Traditionally, crowding has been studied extrafoveally; its underlying mechanisms in the central fovea, where acuity is highest, remain debated. While low-level oculomotor factors are not thought to play a role in crowding, this study shows that they are key factors in defining foveal crowding.

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