Comparing monocular and binocular visual acuity under noisy conditions

It is well known that an important function of binocular vision is to increase the SNR. When a signal simultaneously arrives along two channels, it is summed if the channels are statistically independent. The binocular visual acuity can then theoretically be increased by comparison with the monocular value by a factor of 2, or 1.4. This paper gives the results of experiments to measure the visual acuity by means of Landolt rings. It is established that binocular visual acuity is greater than monocular by a factor of 1.3 on the average. It is assumed that this can be associated with internal multiplicative discretization noise at the level of the retinal receptors. This result is important for understanding image processing in different channels of the visual system.

[1]  D. Brainard,et al.  Double-pass and interferometric measures of the optical quality of the eye. , 1994, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics, image science, and vision.

[2]  Kirsten L. Challinor,et al.  A common contrast pooling rule for suppression within and between the eyes , 2008, Visual Neuroscience.

[3]  D. G. Green,et al.  Monocular versus Binocular Visual Acuity , 1965, Nature.

[4]  V. A. Kotel’nikov CONFERENCES AND SYMPOSIA: On the transmission capacity of 'ether' and wire in electric communications , 2006 .

[5]  Sarah J. Waugh,et al.  Binocular summation for luminance- and contrast-modulated noise stimuli , 2010 .

[6]  M. Georgeson,et al.  Binocular contrast vision at and above threshold. , 2006, Journal of vision.

[7]  Maureen G Maguire,et al.  One eye or two: a comparison of binocular and monocular low-contrast acuity testing in multiple sclerosis. , 2011, American journal of ophthalmology.

[8]  Sarah J. Waugh,et al.  Measurement of interocular suppression across the binocular visual field using luminance-modulated and contrast-modulated noise stimuli , 2013 .

[9]  William A. Simpson,et al.  Two eyes: 2 better than one? , 2009 .

[10]  Rohit Varma,et al.  Binocular visual acuity summation and inhibition in an ocular epidemiological study: the Los Angeles Latino Eye Study. , 2002, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.

[11]  C. Cierpka,et al.  Particle imaging techniques for volumetric three-component (3D3C) velocity measurements in microfluidics , 2011, Journal of Visualization.

[12]  J SWETS,et al.  Decision processes in perception. , 1961, Psychological review.