Vera-Diaz Fuensanta A, Woods Russell L, Peli Eli
New England College of Optometry, Boston, Massachusetts, United States 2Schepens Eye Research Institute of Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Boston, Massachusetts, United States 3Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
Schepens Eye Research Institute of Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Boston, Massachusetts, United States 3Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2017 Jul 1;58(9):3646-3655. doi: 10.1167/iovs.16-20849.
The long-term, low-resolution vision experienced by individuals affected by retinal disease that causes central vision loss (CVL) may change their perception of blur through adaptation. This study used a short-term adaptation paradigm to evaluate adaptation to blur and sharpness in patients with CVL.
A variation of Webster's procedure was used to measure the point of subjective neutrality (PSN). The image that appeared normal after adaptation to each of seven blur and sharpness levels (PSN) was measured in 12 patients with CVL (20/60 to 20/320) and 5 subjects with normal sight (NS). Patients with CVL used a preferred retinal locus to view the images. Small control studies investigated the effects of long-term and medium-term (1 hour) defocus and diffusive blur.
Adaptation was reliably measured in patients with CVL and in the peripheral vision of NS subjects. The shape of adaptation curves was similar in patients with CVL and both central and peripheral vision of NS subjects. No statistical correlations were found between adaptation and age, visual acuity, retinal eccentricity, or contrast sensitivity. Long-term blur experience by a non-CVL myopic participant caused a shift in the adaptation function. Conversely, medium-term adaptation did not cause a shift in the adaptation function.
Blur and sharp short-term adaptation occurred in peripheral vision of normal and diseased retinas. In most patients with CVL, neither adaptation nor blur perception was affected by long-term attention to peripheral low-resolution vision. The impact of blur/sharp adaptation on the benefit of image enhancement techniques for patients with CVL is discussed.
患有导致中心视力丧失(CVL)的视网膜疾病的个体所经历的长期、低分辨率视力可能会通过适应改变他们对模糊的感知。本研究采用短期适应范式来评估CVL患者对模糊和清晰度的适应情况。
使用韦伯斯特程序的一种变体来测量主观中性点(PSN)。在12名CVL患者(视力20/60至20/320)和5名视力正常(NS)的受试者中,测量了在适应七种模糊和清晰度水平(PSN)中的每一种后看起来正常的图像。CVL患者使用首选视网膜位置来观看图像。小型对照研究调查了长期和中期(1小时)散焦和漫射模糊的影响。
在CVL患者和NS受试者的周边视觉中可靠地测量到了适应情况。CVL患者以及NS受试者的中央和周边视觉的适应曲线形状相似。在适应与年龄、视力、视网膜离心率或对比敏感度之间未发现统计学相关性。一名非CVL近视参与者的长期模糊体验导致了适应功能的偏移。相反,中期适应并未导致适应功能的偏移。
正常和患病视网膜的周边视觉中发生了模糊和清晰的短期适应。在大多数CVL患者中,长期关注周边低分辨率视力既不影响适应也不影响模糊感知。讨论了模糊/清晰适应对CVL患者图像增强技术益处的影响。