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Low Vision: Principles and Applications. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Low Vision, University of Waterloo, June 25–27, 1986

Editat de G.C. Woo
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 dec 2012
An International Symposium on Low Vision was sponsored by the Centre for Sight Enhancement of the School of Optometry, University of Waterloo in June 1986, bringing low vision researchers and clinicians together from a number of countries. The unique feature of the conference is the multi-disciplinary approach towards low vision care. A total of 44 papers were presented in the three day period by speakers of note from the fields of optometry, ophthalmology, psychophysics, special education, nursing and vision rehabilitation. The papers deal with issues in diagnostic science, low vision assessment and rehabilitation. The proceedings volume is ideal for clinicians and vision scientists to update their understanding of low vision research and clinical practice.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781461291527
ISBN-10: 1461291526
Pagini: 608
Ilustrații: XXII, 578 p.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Ediția:Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1987
Editura: Springer
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States

Public țintă

Research

Descriere

An International Symposium on Low Vision was sponsored by the Centre for Sight Enhancement of the School of Optometry, University of Waterloo in June 1986, bringing low vision researchers and clinicians together from a number of countries. The unique feature of the conference is the multi-disciplinary approach towards low vision care. A total of 44 papers were presented in the three day period by speakers of note from the fields of optometry, ophthalmology, psychophysics, special education, nursing and vision rehabilitation. The papers deal with issues in diagnostic science, low vision assessment and rehabilitation. The proceedings volume is ideal for clinicians and vision scientists to update their understanding of low vision research and clinical practice.

Cuprins

I.- 1. Measurement of Vision Loss: Theory and Practice Color Plates following page 10..- Section A.- New and Improved Contrast Sensitivity Approaches to Low Vision.- The Evaluation of the Reading Capability of Low Vision Patients Using the Vision Contrast Test System (VCTS).- Threshold and Suprathreshold Deficits in Color Vision in Optic Neuritis.- Contrast Sensitivity.- Section B.- The Effect of Blur Upon Psychophysical Receptive Field Properties.- Quantifying the Magnitude of Visual Impairment with Multi-flash Campimetry.- Spatial vs. Temporal Information in Suspected and Confirmed Chronic Open Angle Glaucoma.- Low Vision Management in Selected Eye Diseases.- The Role of X and Simple Cells in the Contrast Transducer Function of Low Vision and Normal Observers.- Differential Retinal Structural Damage Exhibited by Image Enhancement of Fundus Photographs.- The Visual Requirements of Mobility.- Visual Acuity Deficits and Chromatic Aberration in Pseudophakia.- Measurement of Central Fields Following Macular Degeneration.- Detection of Visual Field Defect Using Topographic Evoked Potential in Children.- Preliminary Study of Topographic Visual Evoked Potential Mapping in Children with Permanent Cortical Visual Impairment.- 2. Prescribing Low Vision Aids.- Prescribing Magnification: Strategies for Improving Accuracy and Consistency.- The Amorphic Fresnel Prism Trioptical System.- Sensorimotor Adaptation to Telescopic Spectacles.- Most Useful Visual Aids for the Partially Sighted.- Paradoxical Cases of Visual Improvement Offered by Above Average Lighting Levels in Cases of Albinism and Retinitis Pigmentosa.- Magnification Efficiency in the Low Vision Patient.- An Overview on the Use of a Low Magnification Telescope in Low Vision.- 3. Reading in Low Vision.- Observations from the Psychology of Reading Relevant to Low Vision Research.- Contrast Polarity Effects in Low Vision Reading.- Effect of Magnification and Field of View on Reading Speed Using a CCTV.- Predicting Reading Performance in Low Vision Observers with Age-Related Maculopathy (ARM).- 4. Low Vision Care.- Section A.- Visual Impairment and Disability: Enhancement and Substitution.- The Clinical Profile of a Young Visually Handicapped Population.- Pathology Characteristics and Optical Correction of 900 Low Vision Patients.- Assessment of Vision of Deaf-Blind Persons: A Review.- An Evaluation of Follow Up Systems in Two Low Vision Clinics in the United Kingdom.- Vision Examinations of Handicapped Children at the Oregon State School for the Blind.- Accommodation in the Visually Impaired Child.- Abnormal Arm Tone, Cigarette Smoking and Use of Blood Pressure Medication in a Sight Enhancement Clinic Population.- The City Study – Preliminary Findings.- Section B.- The Silver Pages: Are They Easier to Read?.- A Hierarchy of Perceptual Training in Low Vision.- Low Vision Performance as a Function of Task Characteristics.- II.- 1. Some Issues in Rehabilitation in Low Vision.- Section A.- National Long Term Care Facility Survey.- Rights of Low Vision Children and Their Parents.- Life Satisfaction of Low Vision Patients and Other Disability Groups: A Preliminary Study.- Section B.- Sight Enhancement Services – A Safety Net or a Spider’s Web?.- Strengthening Low Vision Rehabilitation Through the Accreditation Process.- A Unique Model for a Resource/Rehabilitation Centre for Consumers with Low Vision.