| Literature DB >> 22824242 |
Bianca Huurneman1, F Nienke Boonstra, Ralf Fa Cox, Antonius Hn Cillessen, Ger van Rens.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This systematic review gives an overview of foveal crowding (the inability to recognize objects due to surrounding nearby contours in foveal vision) and possible interventions. Foveal crowding can have a major effect on reading rate and deciphering small pieces of information from busy visual scenes. Three specific groups experience more foveal crowding than adults with normal vision (NV): 1) children with NV, 2) visually impaired (VI) children and adults and 3) children with cerebral visual impairment (CVI). The extent and magnitude of foveal crowding as well as interventions aimed at reducing crowding were investigated in this review. The twofold goal of this review is : [A] to compare foveal crowding in children with NV, VI children and adults and CVI children and [B] to compare interventions to reduce crowding.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22824242 PMCID: PMC3416571 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2415-12-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
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Inclusion criteria
| | Children and Adults with Visual Impairment |
| | Children with Cerebral Visual Impairment up to 18 years |
| | Adults with amblyopia (addressed for 2 intervention studies) |
| Intervention | Progress on crowding tasks after Perceptual Learning intervention (n=7) |
| Type of study | Randomized controlled trials (n=0) |
| | Non-randomized intervention studies (n=4) |
| | Cohort studies (n=3) |
| | Case - control studies (n=4) |
| | Cross - sectional studies (n=11) |
| Outcome measurements | Contour interaction area (n=7) |
| | Crowding ratio (n=8) |
| Effects of Perceptual Learning on crowding (n=7) |
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram.
Type of study and outcome for observational studies
| Cross-sectional | N = 105 Children NV (2-7y) | Contour interaction area | ||||||||
| Children showed the same contour interaction effects as adults at 2.5 × MAR. | ||||||||||
| N = 16 Adults NV | ||||||||||
| Cross-sectional | N = 13 Children NV (3-4y) | Contour interaction area (see Figure | ||||||||
| N = 5 Adults NV | ||||||||||
| Case- control | N = 4 Adults CN | Contour interaction area (see Figure | ||||||||
| N = 6 Adults NV | ||||||||||
| Case- control | N = 6 Adults NV | Contour interaction area (see Figure | ||||||||
| N = 6 Adults idiopathic CN | ||||||||||
| N = 6 Adults with albinism | ||||||||||
| Cross- sectional | N = 140 Children NV (3-9y) | Contour interaction area (see Figure | ||||||||
| N = 4 Adults NV | ||||||||||
| Cross- sectional | N = 292 Children NV (8-17y) | Contour interaction | ||||||||
| The maximum inhibition separation significantly decreased from approximately 2 MAR to 1.5MAR from age 8 to age 17. | ||||||||||
| Cross- sectional | N = 59 Children NV (5-, 8-, 11y) | Contour interaction area (see Figure | ||||||||
| N = 19 Adults NV | ||||||||||
| Cross- sectional | Crowding ratio (see Figure | |||||||||
| Cross- sectional | N = 47 Children NV (3-4y) N = 12 Adults NVN = 12 Children NV (5-7y) | Crowding ratio (see Figure | ||||||||
| Cross-sectional | N = 90 Children NV (4-11y) | Crowding ratio (see Figure | ||||||||
| Cross-sectional | N = 13 Children CVI (5-14y) | Crowding ratio (see Figure | ||||||||
| Cross-sectional | N = 42 Children CVI (2-9y) | Crowding ratio (see Figure | ||||||||
| Case–control | N = 18VI Adults (42-85y)N = 25 Adults NV (42-85y) | Crowding ratio (see Figure | ||||||||
| Cross-sectional | N = 103 Children NV (4-9y) | Crowding ratio (see Figure | ||||||||
| Case–control | N = 75 Children NV (4-8y) N = 20VI children without CNN = 38 VI children with CN | Crowding ratio | ||||||||
| | C2.6′ | C (LH)2.6′ | C2.6′ far (5m) | LH25% | LH50% | LH100% | ||||
| NV | 1.39 | 1.38 | 1.22 | 1.19 | 1.12 | 1.12 | ||||
| VI without CN | 1.52 | 1.56 | 1.17 | 1.12 | 1.12 | 1.11 | ||||
| VI with CN | 1.76 | 1.78 | 1.53 | 1.25 | 1.22 | 1.11 | ||||
Type of study and outcome for intervention studies
| Cohort study Perceptual Learning (PL) | N = 8Adults NV | 1) Maximum reading speed did not improve significantly. Significant reduction in critical print size after training.2) Accuracy for identifying target in a trigram improved significantly (88% improvement).Spatial extent decreased significantly from 1.12x to 0.69x the letter size after training. | ||
| Non-Randomised controlled trial (Non-RCT) Video-game playing (VGP) | Exp. Group: N = 16 Adults NV Control GroupN = 16 Adults NV (all non-videogame players) | Only the action videogame group showed a significant decrease in crowding region (all eccentricities).No improvement single T acuity after training. | ||
| Non-RCT PL | ||||
| Cohort study PL | N = 8 Adults NV | 1) Visual Acuity did not improve in peripheral vision.2) Crowding reduced significantly in peripheral vision. Observers could better identify a target in a cluttered background.3) Training lateral interactions only reduced contrast sensitivity at the highest spatial frequency used. | ||
| Non-RCT VGP | N = 10(action videogame group) N = 3(non action videogame group) N = 7(crossover control group; 20 h occlusion, 40 h video game therapy) Adults with amblyopia | 1.1) On average 1.4 to 1.6 lines improvement of acuity after action videogame;1.2) Non-action videogame players improved 1.5 lines on crowded letters and 0.8 lines for single letters. Patching group no improvement in visual acuity after 20 h. Recovery crowded acuity slightly faster than single. Mean crowding index did not significantly improve.2) Positional acuity improved significantly;3) Spatial attention improved significantly;4) Stereopsis improved significantly. | ||
| Cohort study PL | N = 6Adults NV | Accuracy improvement in identifying letters in flanked condition without noise (22%). Training improves efficiency or equivalent input noise in a subject-dependent matter.-Retained improvements after 1–6 months. | ||
| Non-RCT PL | N = 10(of which 5 served as a control group that trained after performing 2 pre-tests). Adults with amblyopiaN = 10 (training group)N = 7 (control group) Adults NV | 1) Unflanked and flanked acuity both significantly improved in the fellow eye. Difference not significant.2) Unflanked acuity improved significantly.3) More progress for flanked than unflanked acuity.Significant improvements on Bailey-Lovie chart on average 1.5 lines.Comparable results for adults with NV in periphery (no improvement for control group). Two follow up participants performed additional sessions and showed a further significant decrease in their crowding ratio’s (after performing 1–11 additional sessions). |
Figure 2Full extent of the contour interaction area. Figure 2 presents the results of three studies that have measured the full contour interaction area in children and adults with NV. Differences between the studies can partially be explained by the different optotypes used. The study by Semenov used Landolt C’s with flanking bars and the study by Jeon et al used E-gratings surrounded by gratings. E-gratings are more difficult to identify than C-rings for children, which might explain the larger contour interaction areas when E-gratings are used [20,23]. Error bars ± 1 s.e.m.
Figure 3The magnitude of contour interaction effects at 1 and 2 MAR. Figure 3 presents the results of two studies which have measured the magnitude of the contour interaction effect in adults with normal vision, adults with congenital nystagmus (CN) and adults with albinism. As can be seen, the magnitude of the effect (defined by the decrease of visual acuity in log units) is the largest in adults with CN in both studies. Standard errors of the mean were not provided.
Figure 4Crowding ratios measured with charts with 100% interoptotype spacing. Figure 4 presents the results of four studies which measured crowding ratios in different populations: children and adults with normal vision (NV), children with cerebral visual impairment (CVI), and visually impaired (VI) adults. Children with CVI and adults with VI showed higher crowding ratios than respectively children with NV and adults with NV. Error bars ± 1 s.e.m.
Figure 5Crowding ratios measured with charts with 50% interoptotype spacing. Figure 5 presents the results of four studies which have measured crowding ratios in children and adults with normal vision (NV) and children with cerebral visual impairment (CVI). Line means that the crowding ratio was calculated by dividing the single through the line acuity score and circular means that the crowding ratio was calculated by dividing the single acuity through the acuity score that was measured when a target symbol was surrounded by 6 symbols surrounding the target in all directions. A clear age related reduction of the crowding ratio was observed in children with NV. Error bars ± 1 s.e.m.