1. Stiles–Crawford effect of the first kind: assessment of photoreceptor alignments following dark patching
- Author
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Elisabetta Strada, Jay M. Enoch, Vasudevan Lakshminarayanan, Momoyo Kono, Andrew D. Graham, Paul Shih, Wilbur Susilasate, and Ranjani Srinivasan
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Stiles–Crawford effect ,Biology ,Retina ,Pupil ,Optics ,Orientation ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Photoreceptor alignment (inferred) ,Mathematical Computing ,Effect(s) of dark patching ,Phototropism ,Adaptation, Ocular ,business.industry ,Sensory Systems ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Darkness ,Female ,sense organs ,Stiles–Crawford effect of the first kind (directional sensitivity of the retina) ,business ,Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate ,Photopic vision - Abstract
Properties of presumed mechanisms controlling photoreceptor alignments are partially defined. A phototropic mechanism normally dominates alignment, but do modest changes in orientations occur with dark patching? Here, new photopic Stiles–Crawford (SCE-I) determinations were made before patching (pre-patch), just after 8-days of dark-patching (post-patch), and 3 days after patch removal (recovery test). We tested at 0, 11 and 22° in the temporal retina of both eyes. Ten eyes of adult subjects were tested. SCE-I peak positions and Stile's parameter ‘rho’ were assessed. Dark-patching effects were small. Observations revealed meaningful corrective alignment overshoots with recovery in the light. Results suggest (1) the presence of multiple weak mechanisms affecting receptor alignments in the dark; (2) the phototropic mechanism to be dominant in the light; (3) the need for multiple test loci to be sampled in such studies, and (4) small changes in the SCE-I in the pupil plane can reflect meaningful events occurring at the retina.
- Published
- 2001
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