Measurement of the eye pupil response to light stimuli with regulated waveform, wavelength and photopic level

All articles must contain an abstract. The abstract text should be formatted using 10 point Times (or Times Roman, or Times New Roman) and indented 25 mm from the left margin. Leave 10 mm space after the abstract before you begin the main text of your article. The text of your article should start on the same page as the abstract. The abstract follows the addresses and should give readers concise information about the content of the article and indicate the main results obtained and conclusions drawn. As the abstract is not part of the text it should be complete in itself; no table numbers, figure numbers, references or displayed mathematical expressions should be included. It should be suitable for direct inclusion in abstracting services and should not normally exceed 200 words. The abstract should generally be restricted to a single paragraph. Since contemporary information-retrieval systems rely heavily on the content of titles and abstracts to identify relevant articles in literature searches, great care should be taken in constructing both.

[1]  C. Bradshaw,et al.  Comparison of the effects of venlafaxine, paroxetine and desipramine on the pupillary light reflex in man , 1999, Psychopharmacology.

[2]  Daniel J. Buysse,et al.  Sleep deprivation alters pupillary reactivity to emotional stimuli in healthy young adults , 2009, Biological Psychology.

[3]  J. Pokorny,et al.  Human and macaque pupil responses driven by melanopsin-containing retinal ganglion cells , 2007, Vision Research.

[4]  Helmut Wilhelm,et al.  Clinical applications of pupillography. , 2003, Journal of neuro-ophthalmology : the official journal of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.

[5]  I. E. Loewenfeld,et al.  The Pupil: Anatomy, Physiology, and Clinical Applications , 1999 .

[6]  A Kawasaki,et al.  Disorders of the pupil. , 2001, Ophthalmology clinics of North America.

[7]  B Wilhelm,et al.  Pupillographic assessment of sleepiness in sleep-deprived healthy subjects. , 1998, Sleep.

[8]  S. Peirson,et al.  Melanopsin: Another Way of Signaling Light , 2006, Neuron.

[9]  C. D. Harris,et al.  Pupillometry in clinically sleepy patients. , 2002, Sleep medicine.

[10]  Y Morad,et al.  Pupillography as an objective indicator of fatigue. , 2000, Current eye research.

[11]  F. Bremner,et al.  Pupil assessment in optic nerve disorders , 2004, Eye.

[12]  Eric Granholm,et al.  Pupillary and reaction time measures of sustained processing of negative information in depression , 2001, Biological Psychiatry.

[13]  The Pupil Response to Large Regional Stimuli in Patients with Focal Visual Field Loss , 2005 .

[14]  W. D. O'Neill,et al.  Neurologial Interpretations and the Information in the Cognitive Pupillary Response , 2000, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[15]  Christopher A Girkin,et al.  Evaluation of the pupillary light response as an objective measure of visual function. , 2003, Ophthalmology clinics of North America.

[16]  R. Basner,et al.  Pupil staging and EEG measurement of sleepiness. , 2004, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.