Abstract

Summary

This thesis investigates chromatic afterimages and pupillary responses using psychophysical and objective techniques, with implications for understanding how different photoreceptor classes contribute to visual processing. Key findings challenge assumptions about melanopsin's role in dynamic pupil responses and reveal compensatory neural reorganization in congenital visual field loss, which may inform clinical lighting assessments.
Abstract

Key Findings

  • Melanopsin does not appear to contribute to dynamic pupil light reflex responses in humans, based on evidence from rod monochromat and retinitis pigmentosa subjects.
  • Patients with acquired cortical damage (homonymous hemianopia) show absent or reduced pupil responses in the blind hemifield, whereas congenitally affected patients show similar or enhanced responses compared to their sighted hemifield, suggesting neural pathway reorganization.
  • In LHON subjects, not all ganglion cell classes are affected uniformly; rod-mediated pupil light reflex responses were least affected.
  • A model was developed predicting colour confusion lines and pupil colour response characteristics in dichromats at any given background chromaticity.
Categories

Categories

Eye Health & Vision: Investigates pupillary light reflex responses across various visual conditions including hemianopia, retinitis pigmentosa, and optic neuropathy.
The Science of Light: Examines melanopsin's role in dynamic pupil light reflex responses and develops models for luminance and colour processing using photoreceptor-isolating stimuli.
Authors

Author(s)

W Bi
Publication Date

Publication Year

2012
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