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Binocular Vision, Fusion, and Accommodation

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Presentation on theme: "Binocular Vision, Fusion, and Accommodation"— Presentation transcript:

1 Binocular Vision, Fusion, and Accommodation

2 Fusion Development in the Infant
Birth – fixation reflex poor with random eye movements 2-3 weeks – follows light monocularly 6 weeks to 6 months – follows light binocularly 4 weeks to 6 months – convergence developing By 6 months – accommodation developing – lags behind convergence

3 Fusion Sensory fusion – the cortical process of blending the images from each eye into a single binocular stereoscopic image Motor fusion – the mechanism that allows fine-tuning of eye position to maintain eye alignment – this is known as fusional vergence

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5 Approximately 70% of the cells in the striate cortex are binocular cells
Retinal areas from each eye that project to the same binocular cortical cells are called corresponding retinal points.

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7 Worth’s Three Degrees of Fusion
Simultaneous perception Flat fusion Stereopsis

8 Simultaneous perception

9 Flat Fusion Worth Four Dot Test

10 Stereopsis Titmus Stereo Test

11 Binocular Single Vision
Separate and slightly dissimilar images arising in each eye are fused together as a single image.

12 Advantages of Binocular Vision
Single Vision Stereopsis Enlargement of visual field Compensation for blind spot and other differences in the field of vision

13 Normal Binocular Single Vision Requirements
Clear visual axis Sensory fusion Motor fusion

14 Sensory Obstacles Dioptric obstacles – refractive errors, anisometropia Prolonged monocular activity – severe ptosis, media opacities Retinoneural – lesions of retina, optic nerve Proprioceptive

15 Motor Obstacles Congenital craniofacial malformations
Conditions affecting extraocular muscles CNS lesions – involving upper motor neurons

16 The Perception of Depth
Stereopsis Monocular clues to depth

17 Monocular Clues to Depth
Relative size Interposition Linear perspective Aerial perspective Light and shade Motion parallax

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23 Visual Direction Local sign – positional information transferred from the retina to the motor system – the fovea has a retinomotor value of zero Retinal correspondence = single vision Retinal disparity = diplopia

24 Oculocentric Visual Direction

25 Egocentric Visual Direction

26 Cyclopean Eye

27 The Perception of Space
Retinal corresponding points Horopter Retinal disparity Panum’s fusional area Physiological diplopia

28 The Horopter Vieth-Muller Circle Empirical Horopter

29 The Horopter

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31 Normal binocular single vision – the images of the fixated object are bifoveal with no manifest deviation of the eyes Anomalous binocular single vision – the images of the fixated object are projected from the fovea of one eye and an extrafoveal position in the other eye – there is a small manifest deviation of the eyes

32 Misalignment of the two eyes can lead to diplopia and confusion
Diplopia – occurs when one object is seen in two places Confusion – occurs when two dissimilar objects are seen in the same place

33 Suppression and Retinal Rivalry
Normal – physiological diplopia – also known as suspension Anomalous – pathological diplopia and confusion – cortical inhibition of suppressed eye Retinal or binocular rivalry – rapid alternation of dissimilar images

34 Testing Retinal Correspondence
Bagolini lenses Red filter test Worth four dot test Hering-Bielschowsky afterimage test Foveo-foveal test of Cuppers

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37 Worth Four Dot Test

38 Testing Suppression Worth four dot test Polaroid vis-à-vis test
Amsler grid 4 prism diopter base out test Red filter test Bagolini lenses

39 Polaroid Tests

40 Amsler Grid

41 Versions – conjunctive eye movements – the two eyes move in the same direction
Pursuits Saccades

42 Vergences – disconjunctive eye movements – the eyes move in opposite directions
Convergence Divergence Vertical vergence

43 Vergence Tonic Proximal Fusional Accommodative

44 Accommodation Tonic – in the absence of a visual stimulus, the accommodation adopts an intermediate position of D Proximal – resulting from apparent nearness of an object Convergence – accommodation linked to convergence Reflex – involuntary response to blur to maintain a clear image Voluntary – not dependent on a stimulus

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