{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Rapid alternate monocular deprivation does not affect binocular balance and correlation in human adults. {Author}: Lin 林温曼 W;Wei 魏君涵 J;Wang 王文静 W;Zou 邹李颖 L;Zhou 周诗旗 S;Jiang 江楠 N;Reynaud A;Zhou 周佳玮 J;Yu 于旭东 X;Hess RF; {Journal}: eNeuro {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: May 2022 6 {Factor}: 4.363 {DOI}: 10.1523/ENEURO.0509-21.2022 {Abstract}: Recent studies show that the human adult visual system exhibits neural plasticity. For instance, short-term monocular deprivation shifts the eye dominance in favor of the deprived eye. This phenomenon is believed to occur in the primary visual cortex by reinstating neural plasticity. However, it is unknown whether the changes in eye dominance after monocularly depriving the visual input can also be induced by alternately depriving both eyes. In this study, we found no changes in binocular balance and interocular correlation sensitivity after a rapid (7 Hz), alternate and monocular deprivation for one hour in adults. Therefore, the effect of short-term monocular deprivation cannot seem to be emulated by alternately and rapidly depriving both eyes.Significance statementPrevious work has shown that short-term binocular function disruption, which its most extreme form is monocular deprivation, could induce neural plasticity in adult visual system. In this study, we found a balanced deprivation of binocular function could not induce a neuroplastic change in human adults. It appears that ocular dominance plasticity in human adults is unique in so far as it is only driven by an input imbalance not balanced deprivation of binocular function.