Abstract

Summary

Blue-light stimulation of the retinal blind-spot activates melanopsin in ipRGC axons bundled at the optic nerve head, producing measurable pupillary constriction and improving contrast sensitivity at higher spatial frequencies. These findings suggest that non-image-forming photoreception at the blind-spot may influence visual function, which could inform lighting design strategies aimed at optimizing visual acuity and contrast detection.
Abstract

Key Findings

  • Blue-light blind-spot stimulation produced significantly larger post-illumination pupil response (PIPR) amplitudes (2–6 s post-illumination) compared to red-light control, confirming melanopsin-mediated response at the optic nerve head (n=15).
  • Contrast sensitivity was significantly increased 20 minutes after binocular blue-light blind-spot stimulation, but only at spatial frequencies ≥3 cycles per degree (cpd), not at lower spatial frequencies (n=32).
  • Enhancement was confirmed by two independent tests: the Freiburg Visual Acuity and Contrast Test and the Tuebingen Contrast Sensitivity Test.
Categories

Categories

The Science of Light: Demonstrates melanopsin-mediated pupillary responses originating from ipRGC axons at the optic nerve head (blind-spot), advancing understanding of non-classical photoreception sites.
Eye Health & Vision: Shows that blue-light stimulation of the blind-spot enhances contrast sensitivity at spatial frequencies ≥3 cpd, with potential implications for visual performance and optometric applications.
Authors

Author(s)

T Schilling, M Soltanlou, HC Nuerk, H Bahmani
Publication Date

Publication Year

2023
View more publications