Department of Optometry and Vision Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Centre for Vision and Eye Research, School of Optometry and Vision Science, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2021 Mar;41(2):447-456. doi: 10.1111/opo.12783. Epub 2021 Jan 24.
To explore the differential effects of age and eccentricity on the perception of motion at photopic and mesopic light levels.
Thirty-six visually normal participants (18 younger; mean age 25 years, range: 20-31) and (18 older; mean age 70 years, range: 60-79) underwent two testing sessions, one at photopic and one at mesopic light levels. In each session, motion perception was tested binocularly at two eccentricities (centrally, and peripherally at 15° rightwards and 5° superior to the horizontal) for four motion tasks: minimum contrast of a drifting Gabor to identify motion direction (motion contrast); translational global motion coherence; biological motion embedded in noise and the minimum duration of a high-contrast Gabor to determine the direction of motion, using two Gabor sizes to measure spatial surround suppression of motion.
There was a significant main effect of light condition (higher thresholds in mesopic) for motion contrast (p < 0.001), translational global motion (p = 0.001) and biological motion (p < 0.001); a significant main effect of age (higher thresholds in older adults) for motion contrast (p < 0.001) and biological motion (p = 0.04) and a significant main effect of eccentricity (higher thresholds peripherally) for motion contrast (p < 0.001) and biological motion (p < 0.001). Additionally, we found a significant three-way interaction between light levels, age and eccentricity for translational global motion (similar increase in mesopic thresholds centrally for both groups, but a much larger deterioration in older adult's peripheral mesopic thresholds, p = 0.02). Finally, we found a two-way interaction between light condition and eccentricity for translational global motion (higher values in central mesopic relative to peripheral photopic, p = 0.001) and for biological motion (higher values in peripheral mesopic relative to central photopic, p < 0.001).
For the majority of tasks assessed, motion perception was reduced in mesopic relative to photopic conditions, to a similar extent in both age groups. However, because some older adults exhibited elevated thresholds even under photopic conditions, particularly in the periphery, the ability to detect mesopic moving stimuli even at high contrast was markedly impaired in some individuals. Our results imply age-related differences in the detection of peripheral moving stimuli at night that might impact hazard avoidance and night driving ability.
探讨年龄和离焦对明、中光水平下运动知觉的差异影响。
36 名视力正常的参与者(18 名年轻人;平均年龄 25 岁,范围:20-31 岁;18 名老年人;平均年龄 70 岁,范围:60-79 岁)进行了两次测试,一次在明视条件下,一次在中视条件下。在每个测试中,双眼在两个离焦位置(中央和右偏 15°和上偏 5°)进行了四项运动任务测试:漂移的 Gabor 最小对比度以确定运动方向(运动对比度);平移全局运动相干性;嵌入噪声中的生物运动和高对比度 Gabor 的最短持续时间以确定运动方向,使用两个 Gabor 大小来测量运动的空间环绕抑制。
运动对比度(p<0.001)、平移全局运动(p=0.001)和生物运动(p<0.001)的光条件(中视条件下阈值较高)有显著的主效应;运动对比度(p<0.001)和生物运动(p=0.04)的年龄(老年人阈值较高)有显著的主效应;运动对比度(p<0.001)和生物运动(p<0.001)的离焦(周边阈值较高)有显著的主效应。此外,我们发现光水平、年龄和离焦之间有显著的三向交互作用,对平移全局运动有影响(两组中央中视的阈值相似增加,但老年人周边中视的阈值恶化程度大得多,p=0.02)。最后,我们发现光条件和离焦之间对平移全局运动(中央中视相对于周边明视的数值较高,p=0.001)和生物运动(周边中视相对于中央明视的数值较高,p<0.001)有双向交互作用。
对于大多数评估的任务,明视条件下的运动知觉比中视条件下的运动知觉下降,两组的下降程度相似。然而,由于一些老年人即使在明视条件下也表现出较高的阈值,特别是在周边,因此一些个体对中视运动刺激的检测能力即使在高对比度下也明显受损。我们的结果表明,年龄相关的夜间周边运动刺激检测差异可能会影响危险回避和夜间驾驶能力。