I have not seen any papers on that. The clinical expression of the same mechanism as Troxler's is intermittent central suppression (ICS). At least, that's the best explanation I can give for the clinical entity. In the group of intermittent suppressors, I've done standard automated field tests for decades and haven't seen any reliable field defects or responses I could expect with ICS. Some restricted color fields have been seen with the same sort of binocularity problems as ICS using tangent screen testing, but the mechanism is pretty unclear. I tried a binocular field test a few times with ICS. Failed miserably on kids. Some have used a stereo campimeter - an old, old stereoscope field test and suggested some defects. But, all of that just says I haven't seen any papers at all on visual fields and Troxler's. I'd be excited to see a paper on that and even more excited to try to figure out how to recognizably and reliably find a Troxler's response on a field test.