Estimation of the mechanical properties of the eye through the study of its vibrational modes
M.A. Aloy (1), J.E. Adsuara (1), P. Cerd\'a-Dur\'an (1), M., Obergaulinger (1), J.J. Esteve-Taboada (2), T. Ferrer-Blasco (2), R., Mont\'es-Mic\'o (2) ((1) Department of Astronomy, Astrophysics. University, of Valencia. Spain, (2) Department of Optics, Optometry, Vision

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel finite difference method to analyze the vibrational modes of the human eye, enabling non-invasive estimation of its mechanical properties and potential diagnosis of ocular pathologies.
Contribution
It develops a new computational model for the eye's vibrational eigenfrequencies, linking them to mechanical properties and suggesting non-invasive measurement techniques.
Findings
Vibrational eigenfrequencies range from 100 Hz to 10 MHz.
Compressible modes relate to intraocular pressure changes.
Incompressible modes can be detected via retinal scattering patterns.
Abstract
Measuring the eye's mechanical properties in vivo and with minimally invasive techniques can be the key for individualized solutions to a number of eye pathologies. The development of such techniques largely relies on a computational modelling of the eyeball and, it optimally requires the synergic interplay between experimentation and numerical simulation. In Astrophysics and Geophysics the remote measurement of structural properties of the systems of their realm is performed on the basis of (helio-)seismic techniques. As a biomechanical system, the eyeball possesses normal vibrational modes encompassing rich information about its structure and mechanical properties. However, the integral analysis of the eyeball vibrational modes has not been performed yet. Here we develop a new finite difference method to compute both the spheroidal and, specially, the toroidal eigenfrequencies of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
