| Literature DB >> 34955808 |
Asma Braham Chaouche1, Maryam Rezaei1, Daphné Silvestre2, Angelo Arleo3, Rémy Allard1.
Abstract
Age-related decline in visual perception is usually attributed to optical factors of the eye and neural factors. However, the detection of light by cones converting light into neural signals is a crucial intermediate processing step of vision. Interestingly, a novel functional approach can evaluate many aspects of the visual system including the detection of photons by cones. This approach was used to investigate the underlying cause of age-related visual decline and found that the detection rate of cones was considerably affected with healthy aging. This functional test enabling to evaluate the detection of photons by cones could be particularly useful to screen for retinal pathologies affecting cones such as age-related macular degeneration. However, the paradigm used to functionally measure the detection of photons was complex as it was evaluating many other properties of the visual system. The aim of the current mini review is to clarify the underlying rationale of functionally evaluating the detection of photons by cones, describe a simpler approach to evaluate it, and review the impact of aging on the detection rate of cones.Entities:
Keywords: cones; contrast sensitivity; detection of photons; equivalent input noise; motion; noise; photon noise; photoreceptors
Year: 2021 PMID: 34955808 PMCID: PMC8693170 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.744444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
FIGURE 1Top row: Dominant noise source identified based on psychophysically measuring contrast sensitivity as a function of luminance intensity. The blue area shows the viewing conditions (luminance intensity and temporal frequency for left graph (Allard and Arleo, 2017), luminance intensity and spatial frequency for right graph (Silvestre et al., 2018) at which the de Vries-Rose law was observed suggesting that the limiting internal noise source is photon noise (variability in the number of photons detected by cones). The green and red areas show conditions in which the Weber law and the linear law were observed, respectively. Second row, stimuli example used to functionally evaluate the detection of light by cones. Bottom graph shows contrast threshold as a function of external noise contrast, which can be used to evaluate the impact of the internal noise (equivalent input noise).
FIGURE 2Impact of healthy aging on components of the visual system assessed using a novel noise paradigm for spatial contrast sensitivity (left; Silvestre et al., 2019) and motion contrast sensitivity (right; Braham chaouche et al., 2020). The photon noise represents the variability in the number of photons detected by cones and directly reflects the number of photons detected by cones (i.e., when contrast sensitivity is proportial to the square root of the luminance intensity (de Vries-Rose law). The early noise represents the impact of the dominant noise source for conditions under which contrast sensitivity is proportional to luminance intensity (linear law). The late noise represents the impact of the dominant noise source for conditions under which contrast sensitivity is independent of luminance intensity (Weber’s law).