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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Accommodation Responds to Optical Vergence and Not Defocus Blur Alone.

Robert Montés-micóIván Marín-franchPhilip B. KrugerPaula Bernal-molinaJosé J. Esteve-taboadaNorberto López-gilAntonio J. Del ÁGuila-carrasco

subject

AdultMalegenetic structuresVisual AcuityVergenceAstigmatismRefraction Ocular050105 experimental psychologyDeformable mirror03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOpticsmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAdaptive opticsDioptreMathematicsWavefrontbusiness.industry05 social sciencesAccommodation OcularAstigmatismConvergence Ocularmedicine.diseaseeye diseases030221 ophthalmology & optometryFemalesense organsMonochromatic colorCuesbusinessAccommodationPhotic Stimulation

description

Purpose To determine whether changes in wavefront spherical curvature (optical vergence) are a directional cue for accommodation. Methods Nine subjects participated in this experiment. The accommodation response to a monochromatic target was measured continuously with a custom-made adaptive optics system while astigmatism and higher-order aberrations were corrected in real time. There were two experimental open-loop conditions: vergence-driven condition, where the deformable mirror provided sinusoidal changes in defocus at the retina between -1 and +1 diopters (D) at 0.2 Hz; and blur-driven condition, in which the level of defocus at the retina was always 0 D, but a sinusoidal defocus blur between -1 and +1 D at 0.2 Hz was simulated in the target. Right before the beginning of each trial, the target was moved to an accommodative demand of 2 D. Results Eight out of nine subjects showed sinusoidal responses for the vergence-driven condition but not for the blur-driven condition. Their average (±SD) gain for the vergence-driven condition was 0.50 (±0.28). For the blur-driven condition, average gain was much smaller at 0.07 (±0.03). The ninth subject showed little to no response for both conditions, with average gain <0.08. Vergence-driven condition gain was significantly different from blur-driven condition gain (P = 0.004). Conclusions Accommodation responds to optical vergence, even without feedback, and not to changes in defocus blur alone. These results suggest the presence of a retinal mechanism that provides a directional cue for accommodation from optical vergence.

10.1167/iovs.16-21280https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28324117