학술논문

Effect of varying CRT refresh rate on the measurement of temporal summation.
Document Type
Article
Source
Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics. Sep2015, Vol. 35 Issue 5, p582-590. 9p. 1 Diagram, 5 Graphs.
Subject
*VISUAL fields
*VISION
*PERIMETRY
*PERIPHERAL vision
*REGRESSION analysis
Language
ISSN
0275-5408
Abstract
Purpose To quantify the effect of cathode-tube-ray ( CRT) monitor refresh rate on the measurement of the upper limit of complete temporal summation (critical duration) in the peripheral visual field of healthy observers. Methods Contrast thresholds were measured for seven achromatic spot stimuli (diameter 0.48°) of varying duration (nominal values: 10-200 ms) at an eccentricity of 8.8° along the 45°, 135°, 225° and 315° meridians of the visual field in three healthy, psychophysically experienced observers. Stimuli were presented on a CRT display with a refresh rate of 60 and 160 Hz. Contrast thresholds were expressed as contrast energy with stimulus durations being estimated using (1) the sum-of-frames ( SOF) method and (2) Bridgeman's method incorporating measurements of phosphor persistence. Estimates of the critical duration were produced using iterative two-phase regression analysis. Results With stimulus duration expressed as SOF equivalent the critical duration was, on average, 10.6 ms longer with a refresh rate of 60 Hz (mean 45.7 ms, S. D. 10.1 ms) relative to 160 Hz (35.1 ms, S. D. 7.6 ms). When the Bridgeman method was used, minimal differences (1.8 ms) in critical duration values between the two refresh rates (60 Hz: 33.0 ms, S. D. 9.4 ms; 160 Hz: 31.2 ms, S. D. 7.0 ms) were observed. Identical trends were observed in all three subjects. Conclusions Psychophysical measurements of temporal summation are independent of variations in CRT refresh rate when the Bridgeman method, incorporating measured values of phosphor persistence, is used to estimate stimulus duration. This has significant implications for the specification of stimulus duration in psychophysical studies of vision employing conventional display monitors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]