AbstractSubjects maintained their eyes crossed (verged) for a period of 8 min in darkness with monitoring provided by an infrared video system. Changes in resting vergence (RV) and resting focus (RF) were examined. Results showed: (i) visual stimulation was not necessary for adaptation of either RV or RF, but (ii) these purely motor effects were significantly smaller and more dissipative than those attributable to visually driven adaptation, and (iii) voluntary vergence amplitude was negatively correlated with pupil size. Assuming that voluntary vergence is driven by accommodation, then the voluntary signal must enter the oculomotor control system prior to the cross links between channels, but beyond the site of the visually driven adaptive...
AbstractRecent research from our laboratory has been directed at understanding the range of capabili...
AbstractWith the broader use of stereoscopic displays, a flurry of research activity about the accom...
Accommodation and vergence, the two important oculomotor systems, exhibit the property of adapation ...
AbstractConflicting opinions exist as to whether the phasic (reflex) component alone or both the pha...
It is well established that a synkinetic relationship exists between the accommodation and vergence ...
AbstractWe studied gaze-shift dynamics during several gaze-shift tasks and during reading, in five s...
Incomitance is a condition with gaze-dependent deviations of ocular alignment and is common in strab...
In the absence of adequate visual stimulation accommodation adopts an intermediate resting position,...
Natural viewing conditions place equal demands on the vergence and accommodation systems. The two re...
PURPOSE A gaze shift from a target at distance to a target at near leads to pupillary constrictio...
International audienceWhile the mechanisms of short-term adaptation to prism-altered apparent visual...
Incomitance is characterized by gaze dependent deviations of ocular alignment. The physiological mec...
Vergence eye alignment minimizes horizontal, vertical, and cyclodisparities to optimize stereo-depth...
To clearly view approaching objects, the eyes rotate inward (vergence), and the intraocular lenses f...
Ocular accommodation adopts a mean baseline response level of approximately 1.0 D in the absence of ...
AbstractRecent research from our laboratory has been directed at understanding the range of capabili...
AbstractWith the broader use of stereoscopic displays, a flurry of research activity about the accom...
Accommodation and vergence, the two important oculomotor systems, exhibit the property of adapation ...
AbstractConflicting opinions exist as to whether the phasic (reflex) component alone or both the pha...
It is well established that a synkinetic relationship exists between the accommodation and vergence ...
AbstractWe studied gaze-shift dynamics during several gaze-shift tasks and during reading, in five s...
Incomitance is a condition with gaze-dependent deviations of ocular alignment and is common in strab...
In the absence of adequate visual stimulation accommodation adopts an intermediate resting position,...
Natural viewing conditions place equal demands on the vergence and accommodation systems. The two re...
PURPOSE A gaze shift from a target at distance to a target at near leads to pupillary constrictio...
International audienceWhile the mechanisms of short-term adaptation to prism-altered apparent visual...
Incomitance is characterized by gaze dependent deviations of ocular alignment. The physiological mec...
Vergence eye alignment minimizes horizontal, vertical, and cyclodisparities to optimize stereo-depth...
To clearly view approaching objects, the eyes rotate inward (vergence), and the intraocular lenses f...
Ocular accommodation adopts a mean baseline response level of approximately 1.0 D in the absence of ...
AbstractRecent research from our laboratory has been directed at understanding the range of capabili...
AbstractWith the broader use of stereoscopic displays, a flurry of research activity about the accom...
Accommodation and vergence, the two important oculomotor systems, exhibit the property of adapation ...