Elsevier

Vision Research

Volume 39, Issue 20, October 1999, Pages 3480-3489
Vision Research

Spatial and temporal vision in patients treated for bilateral congenital cataracts

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0042-6989(99)00078-4Get rights and content
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Abstract

Using the method of limits, we measured spatial and temporal vision in 13 children who had been deprived of patterned visual input during infancy until they were treated for dense central cataracts in both eyes. Spatial vision was assessed with vertical sine-wave gratings, and temporal vision was assessed with an unpatterned luminance field sinusoidally modulated over time. Under these testing conditions, spatial contrast sensitivity at low and medium spatial frequencies (0.33–2 c deg−1) was within normal limits, but sensitivity at higher spatial frequencies and grating acuity were reduced on average by 1.3 and 0.5 log units, respectively. Temporal vision was affected less severely, with losses in sensitivity only for low temporal frequencies (5 and 10 Hz), which averaged 0.4 log units. Thus, spatial and temporal vision are likely mediated by different neural mechanisms, that are differentially affected by deprivation.

Keywords

Children
Visual deprivation
Binocular congenital cataract
Spatial contrast sensitivity
Grating acuity
Temporal contrast sensitivity
Critical flicker fusion frequency

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