» Articles » PMID: 9331277

Effects of Refractive Error on Detection Acuity and Resolution Acuity in Peripheral Vision

Overview
Specialty Ophthalmology
Date 1997 Oct 23
PMID 9331277
Citations 25
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the effect of refractive error on detection acuity and resolution acuity in peripheral vision.

Methods: Detection acuity, defined as the highest spatial frequency for which luminance gratings can be discriminated from a uniform field, and resolution acuity, defined as the highest spatial frequency for which spatial patterns are perceived veridically, was determined for vertical and horizontal gratings located at 20 degrees, 30 degrees, and 40 degrees of eccentricity. Resolution was also measured for tumbling-E discrimination at these locations. Refractive state of the eye for test targets was manipulated by introducing an ophthalmic trial lens into the line of sight for the stimulus while holding accommodative state fixed.

Results: Detection acuity in the periphery varied significantly with the amount of optical defocus, whereas acuity for grating resolution or letter discrimination was unaffected by defocus over a large range (up to 6 D). These results are consistent with the working hypothesis that detection acuity in the periphery is limited by contrast insufficiency under normal viewing conditions, but resolution is limited by ambiguity because of neural undersampling.

Conclusions: The large depth of focus for resolution acuity measured for peripheral vision indicates that spatial resolution is likely to remain sampling-limited even when peripheral refractive errors are not fully corrected, thus relaxing the methodologic requirements for obtaining noninvasive estimates of neural sampling density of the living eye in a clinical setting.

Citing Articles

Inverted meniscus IOLs reduce image shifts in the periphery compared to biconvex IOLs.

Robles C, Prieto P, Marin-Sanchez J, Alcon E, Hervella L, Theotoka D Biomed Opt Express. 2024; 15(12):7013-7021.

PMID: 39679396 PMC: 11640560. DOI: 10.1364/BOE.547787.


The Relationship between Selected Parameters and the Occurrence of Premyopia in a Group of 1155 Children Aged 8 in Northwestern Poland.

Modrzejewska M, Durajczyk M J Clin Med. 2024; 13(7).

PMID: 38610742 PMC: 11012722. DOI: 10.3390/jcm13071977.


Central and peripheral refraction measured by a novel double-pass instrument.

Christaras D, Tsoukalas S, Papadogiannis P, Borjeson C, Volny M, Lundstrom L Biomed Opt Express. 2023; 14(6):2608-2617.

PMID: 37342694 PMC: 10278616. DOI: 10.1364/BOE.489881.


Two-dimensional peripheral refraction in adults.

Xi X, Hao J, Lin Z, Wang S, Yang Z, Lan W Biomed Opt Express. 2023; 14(5):2375-2385.

PMID: 37206135 PMC: 10191673. DOI: 10.1364/BOE.488098.


Peripheral detection acuity for interference fringes and screen-based Gabor gratings.

Jaisankar D, Suheimat M, Rosen R, Atchison D Biomed Opt Express. 2023; 13(12):6645-6658.

PMID: 36589567 PMC: 9774851. DOI: 10.1364/BOE.473486.