We determined the foveal Stiles-Crawford effect (SCE) as a function of up to 8D accommodation stimulus in six young emmetropes and six young myopes using a psychophysical two-channel Maxwellian system in which the threshold luminance increment of a 1 mm spot entering through variable positions in the pupil was determined against a background formed by a 4 mm spot entering the pupil centrally. The SCE became steeper in both groups with increasing accommodation stimulus, but with no systematic shift of the peak. Combining the data of both groups gave significant increases in directionality of 15-20% in horizontal and vertical pupil meridians with 6D of accommodation. However, additional experiments indicated that much of this was an artefact ...
Accommodation of the human eye relies on multiple factors and visual cues that include object size, ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind describes a gradually diminished visibility of light th...
SIGNIFICANCE The accommodative response is more affected by the type of refractive error than the me...
The Stiles-Crawford effect became steeper with accommodation increase, but without a systematic peak...
Purpose: To measure the Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind (SCE-I), corresponding to central v...
The Stiles-Crawford effect (SCE) is the differential effectivity of light entering the eye at differ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind (SCE) is the phenomenon in which light entering the eye...
We investigated the influence of the Stiles–Crawford effect (SCE) of the first kind on the contrast ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect is often invoked by vision scientists when predictions of the effects of ...
Purpose: Photoreceptor light acceptance is closely tied to the Stiles-Crawford effect of the first k...
We considered the influence that the Stiles–Crawford effect (SCE) has on the measurement of subjecti...
AbstractThe properties of small monochromatic targets as accommodative stimuli are not well understo...
The Stiles–Crawford effect (SCE) of the first kind has often been considered to be important to spat...
Using theoretical estimates of the optical-transfer function and line-spread function as image-quali...
Purpose: Light guided photoreceptor realignment (phototropism) has been previously reported in the h...
Accommodation of the human eye relies on multiple factors and visual cues that include object size, ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind describes a gradually diminished visibility of light th...
SIGNIFICANCE The accommodative response is more affected by the type of refractive error than the me...
The Stiles-Crawford effect became steeper with accommodation increase, but without a systematic peak...
Purpose: To measure the Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind (SCE-I), corresponding to central v...
The Stiles-Crawford effect (SCE) is the differential effectivity of light entering the eye at differ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind (SCE) is the phenomenon in which light entering the eye...
We investigated the influence of the Stiles–Crawford effect (SCE) of the first kind on the contrast ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect is often invoked by vision scientists when predictions of the effects of ...
Purpose: Photoreceptor light acceptance is closely tied to the Stiles-Crawford effect of the first k...
We considered the influence that the Stiles–Crawford effect (SCE) has on the measurement of subjecti...
AbstractThe properties of small monochromatic targets as accommodative stimuli are not well understo...
The Stiles–Crawford effect (SCE) of the first kind has often been considered to be important to spat...
Using theoretical estimates of the optical-transfer function and line-spread function as image-quali...
Purpose: Light guided photoreceptor realignment (phototropism) has been previously reported in the h...
Accommodation of the human eye relies on multiple factors and visual cues that include object size, ...
The Stiles-Crawford effect of the first kind describes a gradually diminished visibility of light th...
SIGNIFICANCE The accommodative response is more affected by the type of refractive error than the me...