There is more to accommodation of the eye than simply minimizing retinal blur

  • Marín-Franch I
  • Del Águila-Carrasco A
  • Bernal-Molina P
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2017 Optical Society of America. Eyes of children and young adults change their optical power to focus nearby objects at the retina. But does accommodation function by trial and error to minimize blur and maximize contrast as is generally accepted? Three experiments in monocular and monochromatic vision were performed under two conditions while aberrations were being corrected. In the first condition, feedback was available to the eye from both optical vergence and optical blur. In the second, feedback was only available from target blur. Accommodation was less precise for the second condition, suggesting that it is more than a trial-and-error function. Optical vergence itself seems to be an important cue for accommodation.

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Marín-Franch, I., Del Águila-Carrasco, A. J., Bernal-Molina, P., Esteve-Taboada, J. J., López-Gil, N., Montés-Micó, R., & Kruger, P. B. (2017). There is more to accommodation of the eye than simply minimizing retinal blur. Biomedical Optics Express, 8(10), 4717. https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.8.004717

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