Effects of sighting and sensory dominance on monovision high and low contrast visual acuity.

We investigated the relationship between ocular dominance and monovision visual performance in 15 presbyopic subjects. Ocular dominance was determined using sighting (hole-in-the-card and mirror tests) and sensory (anisometropic blur suppression test) methods. Correcting the dominant sighting eye for a given viewing distance was found to be an unreliable method of optimizing blur suppression or binocular high/low contrast visual acuity at that distance. If there is any advantage to a particular strategy for selecting the distance monovision eye, it must be realized in vision performance areas other than visual acuity.