Summary
This thesis demonstrates that older adults experience significant vision degradation at low (mesopic) light levels, with spatial contrast sensitivity declining linearly with age and temporal sensitivity dropping sharply after age 50, suggesting lighting environments should maintain higher illuminance levels for older populations. Additionally, adjusting the spectral content of light to increase rod (scotopic) contribution at constant photopic illuminance improved visual acuity, particularly in peripheral vision, offering a practical strategy for mesopic lighting design.
Key Findings
- Spatial contrast sensitivity showed a steady linear decline with age across participants aged 20-74 (n=80), with older participants showing particularly elevated thresholds at lower (mesopic) light levels.
- Temporal modulation thresholds were relatively stable up to age 50, then demonstrated a rapid decline, suggesting different retinal aging mechanisms underlie spatial vs. temporal contrast sensitivity.
- Binocular summation of spatial contrast thresholds declined significantly with age, with 18% of participants showing binocular inhibition; no significant age-related change was found for flicker/temporal binocular summation (only 1% showed inhibition).
- Increasing scotopic luminance at constant photopic illuminance improved foveal visual acuity at low scotopic increases, while peripheral acuity required larger scotopic increases to show improvement.
Categories
Eye Health & Vision: Investigates age-related decline in spatial and temporal contrast sensitivity, visual acuity, and mesopic vision performance across a wide age range.
The Science of Light: Examines how altering spectral power distribution to modify scotopic/photopic luminous efficiency ratios affects visual acuity at mesopic light levels, with direct implications for lighting standards.
Author(s)
H Gillespie-Gallery
Publication Year
2015
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