Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Effect of Q-switched laser flashes on visual detection

Open Access Open Access

Abstract

Luminance thresholds for visual detection can be increased for some time following exposure to bright, eye-safe flashes of light. Since the energy threshold for retinal damage decreases dramatically for shorter pulses, it is unclear whether laser flashes as short as 20 ns can produce effects on visual performance before safe exposure energies are exceeded. Using five trained rhesus monkeys as subjects, we psychophysically measured the duration of vision loss for sine-wave luminance gratings (10-cd/square meter mean luminance) after foveal exposure to a 20-ns laser pulse (Q-switched doubled neodymium:glass, 530-nm wavelength). The laser beam was presented in Maxwellian view and expanded to subtend a visual angle of 12.5°. For laser exposures ranging up to the retinal maximum permissible exposure (388 μJ), we found no loss in the detectability of high contrast (98 %) gratings of 1, 4, and 12 cycles/deg. However, low (10%) contrast gratings were rendered undetectable for various amounts of time depending on the grating spatial frequency. Recovery times were least for 4-cycles/deg gratings and greatest for 1 and 12-cycles/deg gratings.

© 1986 Optical Society of America

PDF Article
More Like This
Spatio-Temporal Considerations in Multi-Flash Campimetry

Mike Dixon, Edward M. Brussell, Charles W. White, and Myriam Muermans
WC4 Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (NAVS) 1986

Effects of pictorial noise interfering with visual detection

A. Van Meeteren and J. M. Valeton
THI8 OSA Annual Meeting (FIO) 1986

Detection of in- and decremental flashes of spatial noise

Maarten A. Bouman, Peter Zuidema, Robert M. Koper, and Lena M. Maattanen
THI6 OSA Annual Meeting (FIO) 1986

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.