Ciuffreda K J, Hokoda S C
Vision Res. 1983;23(12):1585-94. doi: 10.1016/0042-6989(83)90172-4.
Monocular, steady-state accommodative responses were measured as a function of spatial frequency of simple sinusoidal gratings presented at high contrast and target vergence levels in amblyopes, as well as in strabismics without amblyopia and in visually-normal control subjects. In general, spatial frequency dependence of the accommodative response was the rule. However, the amblyopic eyes exhibited markedly reduced accommodative responses over most of the spatial frequency range tested, and this was attributed to reduced accommodative controller gain in the sensory pathways involved in the control of accommodation in the amblyopic eye. Due to the diversity of accommodative response spatial frequency profiles found across all groups, the results suggest that reflex, voluntary, and higher-level perceptual aspects of accommodation may interplay in a complex manner in the act of accommodation on a simple sinusoidal grating.