Differences in visual stimulation between reading and walking and implications for myopia development

被引:3
|
作者
Poudel, Sabina [1 ]
Rahimi-Nasrabadi, Hamed [1 ]
Jin, Jianzhong [1 ]
Najafian, Sohrab [1 ]
Alonso, Jose-Manuel [1 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Coll Optometry, Dept Biol & Visual Sci, New York, NY 10036 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF VISION | 2023年 / 23卷 / 04期
关键词
RETINAL GANGLION-CELLS; TIME SPENT OUTDOORS; EYE GROWTH; REFRACTIVE COMPENSATION; OPTOKINETIC REFLEX; RECEPTIVE-FIELDS; SPECTACLE LENSES; NEAR-WORK; SCHOOL; ASYMMETRY;
D O I
10.1167/jov.23.4.3
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
Visual input plays an important role in the development of myopia (nearsightedness), a visual disorder that blurs vision at far distances. The risk of myopia progression increases with the time spent reading and decreases with outdoor activity for reasons that remain poorly understood. To investigate the stimulus parameters driving this disorder, we compared the visual input to the retina of humans performing two tasks associated with different risks of myopia progression, reading and walking. Human subjects performed the two tasks while wearing glasses with cameras and sensors that recorded visual scenes and visuomotor activity. When compared with walking, reading black text in white background reduced spatiotemporal contrast in central vision and increased it in peripheral vision, leading to a pronounced reduction in the ratio of central/peripheral strength of visual stimulation. It also made the luminance distribution heavily skewed toward negative dark contrast in central vision and positive light contrast in peripheral vision, decreasing the central/peripheral stimulation ratio of ON visual pathways. It also decreased fixation distance, blink rate, pupil size, and head-eye coordination reflexes dominated by ON pathways. Taken together with previous work, these results support the hypothesis that reading drives myopia progression by understimulating ON visual pathways.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Age differences in the use of visual information for controlling step length in walking
    Berg, WP
    Monterotti, L
    JOURNAL OF SPORT & EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 23 : S65 - S65
  • [42] The development of vision between nature and nurture: clinical implications from visual neuroscience
    Giulia Purpura
    Francesca Tinelli
    Child's Nervous System, 2020, 36 : 911 - 917
  • [43] The development of vision between nature and nurture: clinical implications from visual neuroscience
    Purpura, Giulia
    Tinelli, Francesca
    CHILDS NERVOUS SYSTEM, 2020, 36 (05) : 911 - 917
  • [44] The effect of an interrupted daily period of normal visual stimulation on form deprivation myopia in chicks
    Napper, GA
    Brennan, NA
    Barrington, M
    Squires, MA
    Vessey, GA
    Vingrys, AJ
    VISION RESEARCH, 1997, 37 (12) : 1557 - 1564
  • [45] AN ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION OF INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN READING DEVELOPMENT
    Khalifian, Negin
    Laszlo, Sarah
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 50 : S103 - S103
  • [46] Metabolic Differences Between Shod and Barefoot Walking in Children
    Shultz, S. P.
    Houltham, S. D.
    Kung, S. M.
    Hume, P.
    Fink, P. W.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE, 2016, 37 (05) : 401 - 404
  • [47] Kinematical Differences Between Treadmill And Overground Race Walking
    Zhang, Xinrui
    Song, Qipeng
    Zhang, Cui
    Li, Li
    MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE, 2022, 54 (09) : 293 - 293
  • [48] The relationship between visual functions and reading performance in children with reading difficulties
    Breitenbach, Sonja
    PERCEPTION, 2015, 44 : 334 - 335
  • [49] Plantar Pressure Differences Between Nordic Walking Techniques
    Encarnacion-Martinez, Alberto
    Gabriel Lucas-Cuevas, Angel
    Perez-Soriano, Pedro
    Menayo, Ruperto
    Maria Gea-Garcia, Gemma
    JOURNAL OF HUMAN KINETICS, 2017, 57 (01) : 221 - 231