Subjective Straylight Index: A Visual Test for Retinal Contrast Assessment as a Function of Veiling Glare
Francisco J. Ávila, Pilar Casado, Mª Concepción Marcellán, Laura Remón, Jorge Ares, Mª Victoria Collados, Sofía Otín

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new visual test called the subjective straylight index to assess retinal contrast affected by glare, offering a novel way to evaluate visual performance.
Contribution
A new computational method for retinal contrast assessment incorporating ocular straylight effects is proposed.
Findings
The subjective straylight index (SSI) showed a normal distribution peak at 0.46 in young healthy subjects.
SSI correlated with ocular wavefront measures like defocus and trefoil.
Time recovery after glare exposure was related to SSI for high- and mid-contrast levels.
Abstract
Spatial aspects of visual performance are usually evaluated through visual acuity charts and contrast sensitivity (CS) tests. CS tests are generated by vanishing the contrast level of the visual charts. However, the quality of retinal images can be affected by both ocular aberrations and scattering effects and none of those factors are incorporated as parameters in visual tests in clinical practice. We propose a new computational methodology to generate visual acuity charts affected by ocular scattering effects. The generation of glare effects on the visual tests is reached by combining an ocular straylight meter methodology with the Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage’s (CIE) general disability glare formula. A new function for retinal contrast assessment is proposed, the subjective straylight function (SSF), which provides the maximum tolerance to the perception of straylight in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Health · Veterinary medicine and infectious diseases
