Aims: To examine adaptation to progressive addition lenses (PALs) by investigating eye and head movement strategies of individuals naïve to PAL wear; to determine whether adaptation is a short-term change in strategy or is maintained with continued PAL wear; to determine if adaptation strategies are different between PAL designs.
Methods: Ten presbyopic individuals participated in a double-blind crossover study. Participants wore one PAL design for < or = 4 weeks, had approximately 1 week without PAL wear and then wore the second PAL for < or = 4 weeks. Eye and head movements were recorded at the beginning and end of each period of PAL wear in response to several visual tasks. Visual tasks were a flash discrimination task at 2 m and 40 cm, and reading text aloud. Quantitative analysis was undertaken for eye and head movement dynamics (latency, duration, peak velocity, etc.). Categorical analysis used eye and head movement metrics to classify participants as eye-movers, head-movers or mixed at each visit.
Results: There was significant between-participant variability. A number of eye/head movement parameters exhibited carry-over effects. The number of vertical head movements for the distance task showed a significant increase between the first and second visit (F(1,9) = 5.578; p = 0.042), irrespective of lens design. Categorical analysis showed that participants employed task dependent strategies for all tasks. Participants that altered their strategy tended to include more head movements. Seven of the 10 participants preferred the second PAL worn.
Conclusions: Participants recruited more head movements for flash discrimination tasks and for reading text during adaptation to PAL wear. The many and various eye and head movement parameters analysed were unable to discriminate differences dependent on PAL design.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-1313.2006.00460.x | DOI Listing |
J Integr Neurosci
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The eye primordium of vertebrates initially forms exactly at the side of the head. Later, the eyeball architecture is tuned to see ahead with better visual acuity, but its molecular basis is unknown. The position of both eyes in the face alters in patients with holoprosencephaly due to () mutations that disturb the development of the ventral midline of the neural tube.
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