Abstract

Summary

This thesis demonstrates that dynamic pupillometry can serve as an objective, non-invasive clinical tool for detecting visual field deficiencies across multiple retinal and optic nerve pathologies, with encouraging discrimination between patient and control populations. For lighting designers and clinicians, the finding that pupillary dynamics reflect cognitive/attentional load without impairing visual performance suggests pupillometry could be a practical proxy measure for monitoring occupant cognitive state in lit environments.
Abstract

Key Findings

  • Pupil size modulations during visual exploration (driven by retinal location heterogeneity and cognitive load) did not impair visual discrimination performance for spatial frequency tasks.
  • Pupillary dynamics linked to cognitive load were identified as a reliable marker of memory encoding.
  • Novel pupillometric perimetry tests (using endogenous pupil oscillation cycles and frequency tagging) showed encouraging ability to discriminate patients with Stargardt's disease, retinitis pigmentosa, and Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy from healthy controls.
  • New tests were designed to minimize sympathetic (cognitive) modulation interference, improving specificity for retinal/optic nerve dysfunction detection.
Categories

Categories

The Science of Light: Investigates pupillary light reflex dynamics including retinal location heterogeneity, melanopsin-driven responses, and frequency tagging methods relevant to understanding photoreceptor function.
Eye Health & Vision: Develops novel dynamic pupillometry tests for detecting visual field defects in retinal and optic nerve pathologies including Stargardt's disease, retinitis pigmentosa, and Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy.
Authors

Author(s)

S Ajasse
Publication Date

Publication Year

2019
Citations

Number of Citations

3
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