Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

THE DESIGN OF A NEW LETTER CHART FOR MEASURING CONTRAST SENSITIVITY

1.3K

Citations

20

References

1988

Year

Abstract

Summary-I. A consideration of methods for assessing contrast sensitivity leads to the conclusion that, for a clinical test, letters are more suitable than gratings. 2. A letter chart is described in which letters decrease in contrast but not in size. The letters are arranged in groups of three; successive groups decrease in contrast by a factor of IfJ2 from a very high contrast down to a contrast below the threshold of normal observers. A subject's threshold is taken to be the lowest contrast for which at least two letters in a group are correctly reported. 3. A mathematical model of the observer and the chart-testing procedure has been used to predict how the accuracy and repeatability of the test score depend on the parameters of the chart and observer. This reveals that even a low probability of misreporting supra threshold letters will seriously bias the test score if the passing criterion is strict, requiring correct report of all letters in each group, but will have little effect if the passing criterion is less strict. This effect of the passing criterion may explain Rubin's [Clin. Vision Sci. 2, No. I (1987)] finding that the new test, which uses a lenient criterion, has excellent test-retest reliability, much higher than the Ginsburg [Am. J. Optom. Physiol. Opt. 61,403-407 (1984)] chart with its strict criterion. Key words-Contrast sensitivity; letter sensitivity; contrast sensitivity test; clinical testing; charts.

References

YearCitations

Page 1