Literature DB >> 8976989

Optical modulation transfer and contrast sensitivity with decentered small pupils in the human eye.

P Artal1, S Marcos, I Iglesias, D G Green.   

Abstract

Human observers experience a large decrement in visual acuity when a small artificial pupil is displaced from the center to the edge of the dilated natural pupil. This decrement in visual resolution, called the Campbell effect, has been attributed to the retina, the ocular optics, or a combination of the two. Given the uncertainty about the relative magnitudes of these two components over the range of spatial frequencies used in normal vision, we have obtained objective measurements of the retinal image quality and psychophysical measurements of visual performance, with decentered pupils. The contributions of monochromatic aberrations were determined by using double pass measurements of the modulus of the optical transfer function (MTF). For all of the observers, there was a substantial decrement in the MTF with decentering, showing that even when using a 1.5 mm pupil and appropriate spherical/cylindrical refractive corrections, there is a considerable contribution of monochromatic aberrations to the effect. We have compared these optical MTFs with the psychophysical contrast sensitivity functions (CSFs) measured under exactly the same conditions using green gratings generated on the screen of a color monitor. At the low and intermediate spatial frequencies considered (2-16 c/deg), we find the fall in the CSF is much greater than the fall in the monochromatic MTF, with the difference becoming greater as the spatial frequency increases. We show that this discrepancy can be mostly attributed to the effect of transverse chromatic aberration due to the bandwidth of the green stimulus used for the CSF measurements. In conclusion, the combination of the ocular transverse chromatic aberration and monochromatic aberrations accounts for the loss in visual sensitivity found with a decentered small pupil at low and intermediate spatial frequencies.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8976989     DOI: 10.1016/0042-6989(96)00107-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vision Res        ISSN: 0042-6989            Impact factor:   1.886


  5 in total

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Authors:  Shuang Song; Dennis M Levi; Denis G Pelli
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2.  Centration of myopic refractive ablation: should we center treatment on the pupil or the visual axis?

Authors:  Gilad Rabina; Michael Mimouni; Jacqueline Slomovic; Nir Sorkin; Achia Nemet; Igor Kaiserman
Journal:  Lasers Med Sci       Date:  2021-06-29       Impact factor: 3.161

3.  Cone directionality from laser ray tracing in normal and LASIK patients.

Authors:  Susana Marcos; Stephen A Burns
Journal:  J Mod Opt       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 1.464

4.  Full OCT anterior segment biometry: an application in cataract surgery.

Authors:  Sergio Ortiz; Pablo Pérez-Merino; Sonia Durán; Miriam Velasco-Ocana; Judith Birkenfeld; Alberto de Castro; Ignacio Jiménez-Alfaro; Susana Marcos
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2013-01-31       Impact factor: 3.732

5.  Centration axis in refractive surgery.

Authors:  Samuel Arba Mosquera; Shwetabh Verma; Colm McAlinden
Journal:  Eye Vis (Lond)       Date:  2015-02-24
  5 in total

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