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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
61

An investigation of the relationship between the structure and function of the myopic eye. Correlating the optical, functional and structural aspects of ametropia in young adult humans.

Ehsaei, Asieh January 2012 (has links)
The increasing prevalence of myopia over the past few decades and its association with potential ocular complications make myopia an important research topic. The present work is concerned with the structural and functional characteristics of a group of myopic and emmetropic individuals. The technical experiments in this work investigated firstly the effect of instrument alignment on peripheral refraction measurements and revealed that the corneal vertex was an acceptable alignment position of the Shin-Nippon NVision-K 5001 autorefractor, allowing consistent alignment with other instruments used in this research. Secondly, spectacles could be used to provide comparable vision to contact lenses in the visual performance studies. In the main experimental parts of this work, visual performance and multiple aspects of ocular structure were assessed across a wide range of eccentricities along the horizontal and vertical meridians within the same eyes. The structural properties of the myopic eye were measured through central and peripheral autorefraction, and through cornea to retina dimensions using non-contact biometry. In addition, the central and peripheral resolution acuities of myopic and emmetropic eyes for high and low contrast levels were investigated. Our structural and functional measurements revealed relatively prolate myopic eyes with reduced high contrast resolution acuity, compared to emmetropic eyes. Moreover, multiple regression analyses were performed at the fovea and outermost retinal eccentricities common to all core experiments but revealed no strong relationship between the structure and function of the myopic eye. Finally, regarding asymmetry, the nasal and superior retinae were found to be longer and to perform better in comparison to the temporal and superior retinae respectively.
62

Ocular accommodation control and adaptive optics. The development of monocular and binocular adaptive optics instrumentation for the study of accommodation and convergence, and study of the monocular accommodative response to rapid changes in dioptric stimuli.

Curd, Alistair P. January 2014 (has links)
The relationship between accommodation and myopia has been under investigation for many years, and the effort to understand it is ongoing. In this thesis, an introduction to the state of myopia research is given first, with particular reference to studies of accommodation and higher-order ocular aberrations, which feature in the subsequent chapters. Following a brief introduction to the general technique of aberrometry and visual stimulus control using adaptive optics, the development of a monocular adaptive optics instrument for this purpose is described. The instrument is used to vary a dioptric stimulus and record the accommodation response in pilot studies and a detailed experiment, which has also been published elsewhere. It is found, among other things, that accommodation can respond to more than one different input level during its latency period, and that such inputs can be stored until components of the accommodation control system are free to process them. Indications of a minimum halting time for accommodation, of around 0.6 s, are presented. In later chapters, the development and testing of a new, binocular adaptive optics apparatus will be found. As well as binocular aberrometry and adaptive optics control of stimulus aberrations, this instrument displaces images to allow for and stimulate ocular convergence in binocular accommodation experiments. It is the first instrument in the world with its combined functionalities. Finally, the contribution of this thesis is summarised, and further instrumentation development and experiments are put forward for the continuation of this branch of accommodation and myopia research.
63

The Effect of Light Exposure and Refractive Error on Post-Illumination Pupil Responses

Beckett, David, Beckett 14 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
64

Light Exposure, Refractive Error, and Red and Blue Light-Driven Pupillary Responses

Mulvihill, Shane 08 August 2016 (has links)
No description available.
65

The Spatial And Temporal Characteristics Of Blur Adaptation

Subramanian, Vidhya 12 February 2009 (has links)
No description available.
66

Accommodative microfluctuations, crystalline lens tension, ciliary body thickness, and refractive error in children

Schultz, Kristin E. 26 June 2009 (has links)
No description available.
67

Nutrition, Vitamin D and Refractive Error

Marks, Amanda R. 03 September 2010 (has links)
No description available.
68

Evidence that emmetropization buffers against both genetic and environmental risk factors for myopia

Pozarickij, A., Enthoven, C.A., Ghorbani Mojarrad, Neema, Plotnikov, D., Tedja, M.S., Haarman, A.E.G., Tideman, J.W.L., Polling, J.R., Northstone, K., Williams, C., Klaver, C.C.W., Guggenheim, J.A. 01 April 2020 (has links)
Yes / PURPOSE. To test the hypothesis that emmetropization buffers against genetic and environmental risk factors for myopia by investigating whether risk factor effect sizes vary depending on children’s position in the refractive error distribution. METHODS. Refractive error was assessed in participants from two birth cohorts: Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) (noncycloplegic autorefraction) and Generation R (cycloplegic autorefraction). A genetic risk score for myopia was calculated from genotypes at 146 loci. Time spent reading, time outdoors, and parental myopia were ascertained from parent-completed questionnaires. Risk factors were coded as binary variables (0 = low, 1 = high risk). Associations between refractive error and each risk factor were estimated using either ordinary least squares (OLS) regression or quantile regression. RESULTS. Quantile regression: effects associated with all risk factors (genetic risk, parental myopia, high time spent reading, low time outdoors) were larger for children in the extremes of the refractive error distribution than for emmetropes and low ametropes in the center of the distribution. For example, the effect associated with having a myopic parent for children in quantile 0.05 vs. 0.50 was as follows: ALSPAC: age 15, –1.19 D (95% CI –1.75 to –0.63) vs. –0.13 D (–0.19 to –0.06), P = 0.001; Generation R: age 9, –1.31 D (–1.80 to –0.82) vs. –0.19 D (–0.26 to –0.11), P < 0.001. Effect sizes for OLS regression were intermediate to those for quantiles 0.05 and 0.50. CONCLUSIONS. Risk factors for myopia were associated with much larger effects in children in the extremes of the refractive error distribution, providing indirect evidence that emmetropization buffers against both genetic and environmental risk factors. / UK Medical Research Council and Wellcome (grant ref: 102215/2/13/2), and the University of Bristol provided core support for ALSPAC. This research was specifically funded by the UK National Eye Research Centre (grant SAC015), the Global Education Program of the Russian Federation government, a PhD studentship grant from the UK College of Optometrists (“Genetic Prediction of Individuals At-Risk for Myopia Development”), and an NIHR Senior Research Fellowship award SRF-2015-08-005. The Generation R study is supported by the Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO); Netherlands Organization for the Health Research and Development (ZonMw); the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science; the Ministry for Health,Welfare and Sports; the European Commission (DG XII); European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (grant 648268); the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO, grant 91815655); and Oogfonds, ODAS, Uitzicht 2017-28 (LSBS, MaculaFonds, Oogfonds).
69

Effect of Education on Myopia: Evidence from the United Kingdom ROSLA 1972 Reform

Plotnikov, D., Williams, C., Atan, D., Davies, N.M., Ghorbani Mojarrad, Neema, Guggenheim, J.A. 07 September 2020 (has links)
Yes / Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have consistently reported an association between education and myopia. However, conventional observational studies are at risk of bias due to confounding by factors such as socioeconomic position and parental educational attainment. The current study aimed to estimate the causal effect of education on refractive error using regression discontinuity analysis. Methods: Regression discontinuity analysis was applied to assess the influence on refractive error of the raising of the school leaving age (ROSLA) from 15 to 16 years introduced in England and Wales in 1972. For comparison, a conventional ordinary least squares (OLS) analysis was performed. The analysis sample comprised 21,548 UK Biobank participants born in a nine-year interval centered on September 1957, the date of birth of those first affected by ROSLA. Results: In OLS analysis, the ROSLA 1972 reform was associated with a −0.29 D (95% confidence interval [CI]: −0.36 to −0.21, P < 0.001) more negative refractive error. In other words, the refractive error of the study sample became more negative by −0.29 D during the transition from a minimum school leaving age of 15 to 16 years of age. Regression discontinuity analysis estimated the causal effect of the ROSLA 1972 reform on refractive error as −0.77 D (95% CI: −1.53 to −0.02, P = 0.04). Conclusions: Additional compulsory schooling due to the ROSLA 1972 reform was associated with a more negative refractive error, providing additional support for a causal relationship between education and myopia. / Global Education program of the Russian Federation government (DP) and an NIHR Senior Research Fellowship award SRF-2015-08-005 (CW), The Department for Health through an award made by the NIHR to the Biomedical Research Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom (grant no. BRC2_009). Additional support was provided by The Special Trustees of Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom (grant no. ST 12 09)
70

Sympathetic innervation of ciliary muscle and oculomotor function in emmetropic and myopic young adults.

Mallen, Edward A.H., Gilmartin, B., Wolffsohn, J.S. January 2005 (has links)
No / Purpose: Evidence exists for an additional inhibitory accommodative control system mediated by the sympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system (ANS). This work aims to show the relative prevalence of sympathetic inhibition in young emmetropic and myopic adults, and to evaluate the effect of sympathetic facility on accommodative and oculomotor function. Methods: Profiling of ciliary muscle innervation was carried out in 58 young adult subjects (30 emmetropes, 14 early onset myopes, 14 late onset myopes) by examining post-task open-loop accommodation responses, recorded continuously by a modified open-view infrared optometer. Measurements of amplitude of accommodation, tonic accommodation, accommodative lag at near, AC/A ratio, and heterophoria at distance and near were made to establish a profile of oculomotor function. Results: Evidence of sympathetic inhibitory facility in ciliary smooth muscle was observed in 27% of emmetropes, 21% of early-onset myopes and 29% of late-onset myopes. Twenty-six percent of all subjects demonstrated access to sympathetic facility. Closed-loop oculomotor function did not differ significantly between subjects with sympathetic facility, and those with sympathetic deficit. Conclusions: Emmetropic and myopic groups cannot be distinguished in terms of the relative proportions having access to sympathetic inhibition. Presence of sympathetic innervation does not have a significant effect on accommodative function under closed-loop viewing conditions.

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