The effect of strabismus on object detection in the ring scotoma of a monocular bioptic telescope

被引:7
|
作者
Doherty, Amy L. [1 ]
Bowers, Alex R. [1 ]
Luo, Gang [1 ]
Peli, Eli [1 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Schepens Eye Res Inst, Massachusetts Eye & Ear, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
driving; low vision; rehabilitation; vision multiplexing; BINOCULAR-RIVALRY; FIELD LOSS; DOMINANCE; SUPPRESSION; PERCEPTION; SIZE;
D O I
10.1111/opo.12067
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
Purpose People with reduced visual acuity are permitted to drive with the aid of bioptic telescopes in the USA, the Netherlands, and Canada. When viewing through a monocular bioptic telescope, suppression of the deviating eye in strabismus may reduce the ability of the non-telescope eye to detect objects whose images fall in the ring scotoma area of the telescope eye, which could impair detection of traffic-relevant events. This ability to detect stimuli in the ring scotoma area was compared for strabismic and non-strabismic patients. Methods Ten strabismic and six non-strabismic patients with bilaterally reduced visual acuity (0.30-1.0 logMAR, 6/12 to 6/60) participated. A dichoptic perimeter presented stimuli to the fellow (non telescope) eye in the area of the ring scotoma under binocular viewing. Fellow-eye detection rates were determined with and without a bioptic, on uniform and patterned backgrounds, while performing passive (viewing a cross) and active (reading letters) fixation tasks. Results All strabismic patients were found to have anomalous retinal correspondence. Both non-strabismic and strabismic patients had lower fellow-eye detection rates on patterned than on uniform backgrounds, and while performing the active task. In addition, strabismic patients had lower detection with than without the bioptic on the patterned background. They also had a larger decrease in detection from the uniform to the patterned background than non-strabismic patients (26% vs 8%). Depending on the angle and direction of the deviation relative to the stimulus side, strabismus either increased or decreased fellow-eye stimulus eccentricity on the retina. Larger detection rate reductions between the uniform and patterned backgrounds were associated with more eccentric stimulus locations (=0.61, p=0.013). Conclusions Both strabismic patients and non-strabismic patients were able to detect stimuli with the fellow eye in the ring scotoma area, demonstrating successful bi-ocular multiplexing. However, strabismic patients generally had a greater reduction in detection performance from the uniform to the patterned background than non-strabismic patients, which was accounted for in part by differences in stimulus eccentricities on the retina (that varied with the angle and direction of the strabismus). However, a study with a larger sample, including participants with strabismus and normal retinal correspondence, is needed before our findings can be generalized.
引用
收藏
页码:550 / 560
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Object Detection in the Ring Scotoma of a Monocular Bioptic Telescope
    Doherty, Amy L.
    Bowers, Alex R.
    Luo, Gang
    Peli, Eli
    ARCHIVES OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2011, 129 (05) : 611 - 617
  • [2] Hazard detection with a monocular bioptic telescope
    Doherty, Amy L.
    Peli, Eli
    Luo, Gang
    OPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS, 2015, 35 (05) : 530 - 539
  • [3] MONOCULAR RING SCOTOMA
    BENDER, AL
    NEURO-OPHTHALMOLOGY, 1983, 3 (02) : 89 - 96
  • [4] Hazard Detection With Monocular Bioptic Telescopes in a Driving Simulator
    Tang, Xiaolan
    Bronstad, Matt
    Spano, Lauren
    Doherty, Amy
    Moharrer, Mojtaba
    Luo, Gang
    Bowers, Alex
    TRANSLATIONAL VISION SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2020, 9 (04): : 1 - 17
  • [5] Strabismus Detection in Monocular Eye Images for Telemedicine Applications
    Kurdthongmee, Wattanapong
    Udomvej, Lunla
    Sukkuea, Arsanchai
    Kurdthongmee, Piyadhida
    Sangeamwong, Chitchanok
    Chanakarn, Chayanid
    JOURNAL OF IMAGING, 2024, 10 (11)
  • [6] Evaluation of a Paradigm to Investigate Detection of Road Hazards when Using a Bioptic Telescope
    Bowers, Alex R.
    Bronstad, P. Matthew
    Spano, Lauren P.
    Huq, Bidisha
    Tang, Xiaolan
    Doherty, Amy
    Peli, Eli
    Luo, Gang
    OPTOMETRY AND VISION SCIENCE, 2018, 95 (09) : 785 - 794
  • [7] Moving Object Detection Using Monocular Vision
    Wang, Yin-Tien
    Chen, Kuo-Wei
    Chiou, Ming-Jang
    INTELLIGENT AUTONOMOUS SYSTEMS 12, VOL 1, 2013, 193 : 183 - 192
  • [8] Object Detection and Path Finding Using Monocular Vision
    Pande, Dhruv
    Sharma, Chhavi
    Upadhyaya, Vikas
    2014 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SIGNAL PROPAGATION AND COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY (ICSPCT 2014), 2014, : 376 - 379
  • [9] Aerial Monocular 3D Object Detection
    Hu, Yue
    Fang, Shaoheng
    Xie, Weidi
    Chen, Siheng
    IEEE ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION LETTERS, 2023, 8 (04) : 1959 - 1966
  • [10] Disentangling Monocular 3D Object Detection
    Simonelli, Andrea
    Bulo, Samuel Rota
    Porzi, Lorenzo
    Lopez-Antequera, Manuel
    Kontschieder, Peter
    2019 IEEE/CVF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION (ICCV 2019), 2019, : 1991 - 1999