scholarly journals Spatial Properties of Filters Underlying Vernier Acuity Revealed by Masking: Evidence for Collator Mechanisms * *Preliminary results were reported at ARVO, 1994; Mussap, A. J. & Levi, D.M. (1994). Vernier acuity with spatially limited grating masks. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science (Supplement), 35, 2065.

1996 ◽  
Vol 36 (16) ◽  
pp. 2459-2473 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER J. MUSSAP ◽  
DENNIS M. LEVI
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Zielińska ◽  
Karolina Kiluk ◽  
Maciej Wojtkowski ◽  
Katarzyna Komar

Two-photon absorption occurring in photoreceptors of human eye is responsible for perception of pulsed infrared laser beams. Color of perceived light corresponds to about half of wavelength of stimulating beam. This recently discovered phenomenon is called two-photon vision. However it is yet not clear how such phenomena could impact an ophthalmic diagnosis and therefore further studies are required. In this paper we present the system that enables future psychophysical experiments to extend knowledge about two-photon vision and its diagnostic value by identifying differences between two-photon and single-photon vision. Full Text: PDF ReferencesD. A. Atchison, G. Smith, Optics of the human eye (Butterworth-Heinemann 2000) CrossRef G. Palczewska et al. "Human infrared vision is triggered by two-photon chromophore isomerization", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111, 1428 (2014). CrossRef P. Artal, S. Manzanera, K. Komar, A. Gambín-Regadera, M. Wojtkowski, "Visual acuity in two-photon infrared vision", Optica 4, 1488 (2017). CrossRef K. Komar et al. "Posterior Eye Shape Measurement With Retinal OCT Compared to MRI", Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science 57, 196 (2016). CrossRef K. Komar et al. "Two-photon visual sensitivity of human cones - a psychophysical study", Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science 59, 4049 (2018). DirectLink S. A. Burns,R.H. Webb, Handbook of optics 28 (New York, McGraw Hill 1994) DirectLink R. W. Nygaard, T. E. Frumkes, "Calibration of the retinal illuminance provided by maxwellian views", Vision Research (1982) CrossRef P. Melillo et al. "Pupillometric analysis for assessment of gene therapy in Leber Congenital Amaurosis patients", Biomedical engineering online 11, 40 (2012) CrossRef P. A. Stanley, A. K. Davies, "The effect of field of view size on steady-state pupil diameter", Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics, 15, 601 (1995) CrossRef S. Mathôt, "Pupil mimicry is the result of brightness perception of the iris and pupil" Journal of Cognition 1 (2018) CrossRef M. M. Thomas, T. D. Lamb, "Light adaptation and dark adaptation of human rod photoreceptors measured from the a‐wave of the electroretinogram", The Journal of physiology 518, 479 (1999) CrossRef


Perception ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 373-373
Author(s):  
A E Stoper

Many studies have shown that large errors are made when setting a target (T) to visually perceived eye level (VPEL) in a pitched environmental surround. The error in judgement of VPEL is typically about 50% of the environmental pitch angle. An observer can, however, point to the level of the target (T) with much smaller errors (eg Stoper et al, 1992 Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society30 439, found a shift of pointing of only 4% of the environmental pitch). These small pointing errors are found when the observer reaches out with an unseen hand and touches the surface on which T is presented. We call this ‘type I pointing’. If longer distances (183 cm) are used the observer must walk (with closed eyes, as in ‘pin the tail on the donkey’) in order to touch the surface on which T is presented. We call this ‘type II pointing’; it results in much larger errors, approaching in angular magnitude the errors in judgement of VPEL. In the present experiments the observer indicated the level of T by touching a point on a unseen pole which was just to the right of the observer's eyes, and thus separated from T by the viewing distance [as in the ‘manual task’ used to judge apparent height by Stoper and Bautista (1992 Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Supplement33 962)]. We call this ‘type III pointing’. This method, for both long and short distances, produced large errors similar in magnitude to those of type II pointing. These results are explained by the assumptions that environmental pitch causes an error in the judgement of the apparent horizontal in the sagittal plane (sagittal apparent horizontal; SAH) and that SAH is used in pointing of types II and III, but not of type I.


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 185-188
Author(s):  
Gy. Szabó ◽  
K. Sárneczky ◽  
L.L. Kiss

AbstractA widely used tool in studying quasi-monoperiodic processes is the O–C diagram. This paper deals with the application of this diagram in minor planet studies. The main difference between our approach and the classical O–C diagram is that we transform the epoch (=time) dependence into the geocentric longitude domain. We outline a rotation modelling using this modified O–C and illustrate the abilities with detailed error analysis. The primary assumption, that the monotonity and the shape of this diagram is (almost) independent of the geometry of the asteroids is discussed and tested. The monotonity enables an unambiguous distinction between the prograde and retrograde rotation, thus the four-fold (or in some cases the two-fold) ambiguities can be avoided. This turned out to be the main advantage of the O–C examination. As an extension to the theoretical work, we present some preliminary results on 1727 Mette based on new CCD observations.


2000 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 163-165
Author(s):  
S. K. Solanki ◽  
M. Fligge ◽  
P. Pulkkinen ◽  
P. Hoyng

AbstractThe records of sunspot number, sunspot areas and sunspot locations gathered over the centuries by various observatories are reanalysed with the aim of finding as yet undiscovered connections between the different parameters of the sunspot cycle and the butterfly diagram. Preliminary results of such interrelationships are presented.


1978 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 31-35
Author(s):  
R. B. Hanson

Several outstanding problems affecting the existing parallaxes should be resolved to form a coherent system for the new General Catalogue proposed by van Altena, as well as to improve luminosity calibrations and other parallax applications. Lutz has reviewed several of these problems, such as: (A) systematic differences between observatories, (B) external error estimates, (C) the absolute zero point, and (D) systematic observational effects (in right ascension, declination, apparent magnitude, etc.). Here we explore the use of cluster and spectroscopic parallaxes, and the distributions of observed parallaxes, to bring new evidence to bear on these classic problems. Several preliminary results have been obtained.


Author(s):  
Irwin Bendet ◽  
Nabil Rizk

Preliminary results reported last year on the ion etching of tobacco mosaic virus indicated that the diameter of the virus decreased more rapidly at 10KV than at 5KV, perhaps reaching a constant value before disappearing completely.In order to follow the effects of ion etching on TMV more quantitatively we have designed and built a second apparatus (Fig. 1), which incorporates monitoring devices for measuring ion current and vacuum as well as accelerating voltage. In addition, the beam diameter has been increased to approximately 1 cm., so that ten electron microscope grids can be exposed to the beam simultaneously.


Author(s):  
R. Varughese ◽  
S. W. Thompson ◽  
P. R. Howell

Ever since Habraken and Economopoulos first employed the term granular bainite to classify certain unconventional transformation products in continuously cooled steels, the term has been widely accepted and used, despite the lack of a clear consensus as to the detailed nature of the transformation products which constitute granular bainite. This paper presents the preliminary results of a TEM investigation of an 0.04 wt% C, copper-containing steel (designated HSLA-100). It is suggested that the term granular ferrite rather than granular bainite is a more accurate description of this multiphase reaction product.Figure 1 is a light micrograph of a sample which had been air-cooled from 900°C to room temperature. The microstructure is typical of that which has been termed granular bainite in the past and appears to consist of equiaxed ferritic grains together with other minor transformation products. In order to examine these structures in more detail, both continuously cooled and isothermally transformed and quenched materials have been examined with TEM. Granular bainite has been found in virtually all samples.


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