| Literature DB >> 33977361 |
Sven P Heinrich1,2, Isabell Strübin3, Michael Bach3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Visual evoked potential (VEP) recordings for objective visual acuity estimates are typically obtained monocularly with the contralateral eye occluded. Psychophysical studies suggest that the translucency of the occluder has only a minimal effect on the outcome of an acuity test. However, there is literature evidence for the VEP being susceptible to the type of occlusion. The present study assessed whether this has an impact on VEP-based estimates of visual acuity.Entities:
Keywords: Binocular interaction; Occlusion; Rivalry; Visual acuity; Visual evoked potential
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33977361 PMCID: PMC8553676 DOI: 10.1007/s10633-021-09840-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Doc Ophthalmol ISSN: 0012-4486 Impact factor: 2.379
Fig. 1Graphs A1–A6 show typical time-course data (average of 1-s segments) of one participant for all check sizes. Graph B shows the resulting tuning curve, i.e., the amplitude of the first harmonic as a function of the logarithm of the stimulus’ spatial frequency. Asterisk-shaped markers indicate that the response is significantly different from noise (single-test α = 0.05). The dashed line was fitted to the descending slope of the tuning curve following the heuristic algorithm described by Bach et al. [32]. The abscissa intercept is taken as a measure of the resolving power of the visual system, which can be converted into an estimate of visual acuity
Fig. 2Scatterplots comparing acuity estimates (converted from VEP spatial frequency thresholds) obtained with a translucently occluded occluders (ordinate) to those obtained with a non-translucently occluded contralateral eye (abscissa). In three cases the data points of two or three participants coincide. These are represented as ‘sunflower’ markers [42] with the number of petals (sectors) indicating the number of data points. Results with good and degraded acuity clearly segregate. With the heuristic algorithm, estimated acuity with good acuity tends to be better with non-translucent occlusion than with translucent occlusion. This was not the case with the machine learning approach
Fig. 3Three examples of relatively similar tuning curves obtained from different individuals with undegraded vision in the tested eye and either non-translucent (bold line) or translucent (thin line) occlusion of the contralateral eye. The dashed straight lines are fitted to the tuning curves in accordance with the heuristic algorithm. Asterisk-shaped markers indicate response significance (see Fig. 1). In all three cases shown, spatial frequency thresholds (abscissa intercept of fitted line) were higher with translucent occlusion. However, the tuning curves show no obvious common pattern that would consistently underlie this effect