“…More generally, amblyopia affects a broad range of sensory functions in both the amblyopic ( Asper, Crewther, & Crewther, 2000a ; Asper, Crewther, & Crewther, 2000b ; Baker, Meese, & Hess, 2008 ; Hess, Thompson, & Baker, 2014 ; Hess & Howell, 1977 ; Levi, 2020 ; Levi & Harwerth, 1977 ; Mullen, Sankeralli, & Hess, 1996 ; Pardhan & Gilchrist, 1992 ) and non-amblyopic fellow eye ( Birch, Jost, Wang, Kelly, & Giaschi, 2019 ; Meier & Giaschi, 2017 ). These sensory deficits impact visuomotor behaviors such as saccadic eye movements ( Ciuffreda, Kenyon, & Stark, 1978a ; Ciuffreda, Kenyon, & Stark, 1978b ; Gambacorta, Ding, McKee, & Levi, 2018 ; Mackensen, 1958 ; Niechwiej-Szwedo, Goltz, Chandrakumar, Hirji, & Wong, 2010 ; Niechwiej-Szwedo, Chandrakumar, Goltz, & Wong, 2012 ; Perdziak, Witkowska, Gryncewicz, Przekoracka-Krawczyk, & Ober, 2014 ; Perdziak, Witkowska, Gryncewicz, & Ober, 2016 ; Perdziak, Gryncewicz, Witkowska, Sawosz, & Ober, 2019 ; von Noorden, 1961 ) and hand-eye coordination ( Grant, Melmoth, Morgan, & Finlay, 2007 ; Grant & Conway, 2015 ; Grant & Moseley, 2011 ; Melmoth, Finlay, Morgan, & Grant, 2009 ; Niechwiej-Szwedo, Goltz, Colpa, Chandrakumar, & Wong, 2017 ; Niechwiej-Szwedo, Colpa, & Wong, 2019 ). In particular, saccadic and manual response times are significantly delayed for stimuli viewed through the amblyopic eye ( Gambacorta et al, 2018 ; Hamasaki & Flynn, 1981 ; Levi, Harwerth, & Manny, 1979 ).…”