Using the stigmatoscope, the variability of the dioptric power of the eye during steady fixation was measured for four observers over a range of intensities from 2¯.5 to 3.0 log trolands in one-half logarithmic steps. Two different viewing conditions, (constant and variable size test letters), were studied but no significant difference between them was obtained. There was almost a fourfold decrease in the variability of the settings as the intensity was increased over this range. There was a sharp transition at one troland, suggestive of a discontinuity between scotopic and photopic vision. These changes could be eliminated by cycloplegia of the fixating eye. Essentially the same results were obtained when the refraction of one eye was measured objectively (with a concidence optometer), while the other eye fixated the chart. This latter technique is, however, less valid at the lower intensities because of the tendency to fixate the measuring light of the optometer. The data can be quantitatively described by a theory which postulates that the accommodation is continually fluctuating and that the limits of fluctuation are proportional to threshold ΔI/I.
[1]
S. Hecht,et al.
RODS, CONES, AND THE CHEMICAL BASIS OF VISION
,
1937
.
[2]
C. G. Mueller,et al.
Stereoscopic Acuity for Various Levels of Illumination.
,
1948,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[3]
S. Hecht.
A THEORY OF VISUAL INTENSITY DISCRIMINATION
,
1935,
The Journal of general physiology.
[4]
S. Hecht,et al.
THE VISIBILITY OF SINGLE LINES AT VARIOUS ILLUMINATIONS AND THE RETINAL BASIS OF VISUAL RESOLUTION
,
1939,
The Journal of general physiology.
[5]
E. Fincham,et al.
The coincidence optometer
,
1937
.
[6]
G WESTHEIMER,et al.
Accommodation measurements in empty visual fields.
,
1957,
Journal of the Optical Society of America.
[7]
E F FINCHAM,et al.
The Accommodation Reflex and its Stimulus *
,
1951,
The Journal of physiology.