Hutchings Natalie, Irving Elizabeth L, Jung Nadine, Dowling Lisa M, Wells Kelly A, Lillakas Linda
School of Optometry, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2007 Mar;27(2):142-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-1313.2006.00460.x.
To examine adaptation to progressive addition lenses (PALs) by investigating eye and head movement strategies of individuals naïve to PAL wear; to determine whether adaptation is a short-term change in strategy or is maintained with continued PAL wear; to determine if adaptation strategies are different between PAL designs.
Ten presbyopic individuals participated in a double-blind crossover study. Participants wore one PAL design for < or = 4 weeks, had approximately 1 week without PAL wear and then wore the second PAL for < or = 4 weeks. Eye and head movements were recorded at the beginning and end of each period of PAL wear in response to several visual tasks. Visual tasks were a flash discrimination task at 2 m and 40 cm, and reading text aloud. Quantitative analysis was undertaken for eye and head movement dynamics (latency, duration, peak velocity, etc.). Categorical analysis used eye and head movement metrics to classify participants as eye-movers, head-movers or mixed at each visit.
There was significant between-participant variability. A number of eye/head movement parameters exhibited carry-over effects. The number of vertical head movements for the distance task showed a significant increase between the first and second visit (F(1,9) = 5.578; p = 0.042), irrespective of lens design. Categorical analysis showed that participants employed task dependent strategies for all tasks. Participants that altered their strategy tended to include more head movements. Seven of the 10 participants preferred the second PAL worn.
Participants recruited more head movements for flash discrimination tasks and for reading text during adaptation to PAL wear. The many and various eye and head movement parameters analysed were unable to discriminate differences dependent on PAL design.
通过研究初次佩戴渐进多焦点镜片(PAL)者的眼动和头部运动策略,来检验对PAL的适应性;确定适应性是策略的短期变化还是随着持续佩戴PAL而维持;确定不同PAL设计之间的适应策略是否不同。
10名老花眼个体参与了一项双盲交叉研究。参与者佩戴一种PAL设计镜片≤4周,然后有大约1周不佩戴PAL,接着佩戴第二种PAL镜片≤4周。在每次佩戴PAL期间开始和结束时,记录参与者在执行多项视觉任务时的眼动和头部运动。视觉任务包括2米和40厘米处的闪光辨别任务以及大声朗读文本。对眼动和头部运动动力学(潜伏期、持续时间、峰值速度等)进行了定量分析。分类分析使用眼动和头部运动指标将每次就诊时的参与者分类为眼动者、头部运动者或混合类型。
参与者之间存在显著差异。一些眼/头部运动参数表现出延续效应。无论镜片设计如何,远距离任务中垂直头部运动的次数在第一次和第二次就诊之间显著增加(F(1,9)=5.578;p=0.042)。分类分析表明,参与者针对所有任务采用了任务依赖策略。改变策略的参与者往往会增加更多的头部运动。10名参与者中有7名更喜欢第二次佩戴的PAL。
在适应PAL佩戴过程中,参与者在闪光辨别任务和阅读文本时会增加更多的头部运动。所分析的众多不同的眼动和头部运动参数无法区分取决于PAL设计的差异。