“…This may be due, at least in part, to a reduced strength of amblyopic eye input to higher level areas (Anderson, Holliday, & Harding, 1999; Anderson & Swettenham, 2006). Thus, whereas V1 anomalies may be at the root of amblyopic impairments, they are likely to be amplified by the progressive degradation of feed-forward neural signals in the dorsal and ventral pathways (Barnes, Hess, Dumoulin, Achtman, & Pike, 2001; Choi et al, 2001; Conner, Odom, Schwartz, & Mendola, 2007; El-Shamayleh, Kiorpes, Kohn, & Movshon, 2010; Goodyear, Nicolle, Humphrey, & Menon, 2000; Ho & Giaschi, 2009; Imamura et al, 1997; Kiorpes, 2006; Kiorpes et al, 1998; Kiorpes & Movshon, 1996; Levi, 2006; X. Li, Dumoulin, Mansouri, & Hess, 2007; Muckli et al, 2006; Secen, Culham, Ho, & Giaschi, 2011; Shooner et al, 2015; Sincich, Jocson, & Horton, 2012). Indeed, several studies have shown reduced levels of activation for amblyopes than neurotypical observers as far downstream as parietal and ventral temporal cortex (Ho & Giaschi, 2009; Hyvarinen, Hyvarinen, & Linnankoski, 1981; Lerner et al, 2006; Secen et al, 2011; review by Anderson & Swettenham, 2006).…”