Spatial frequency content of the Cardiff and related acuity tests |
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Authors: | W. N. Charman |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, UK. neil.charman@tesco.net |
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Abstract: | In the Cardiff acuity test, simple pictures on an otherwise neutral grey card are defined by borders consisting of a relatively broad white band flanked by black bands each half the width of the white band. Higher levels of acuity correspond to the ability to detect figures defined by narrower borders, the figure size remaining constant. It is sometimes implied that the acuity limit corresponding to each card can be equated with different levels of grating resolution, the total width of the border corresponding to the overall grating period. It is shown that although the spatial frequency spectra of the Cardiff figures, like those of other vanishing optotypes, lack very low-frequency components, they have a complex two-dimensional form. The figures have wide spatial bandwidth and no well-defined discrete frequency components. As a result, the relationship between measured Cardiff and grating acuity will vary somewhat, depending upon the particular optical, neural or other deficits of the individual being tested. |
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Keywords: | Cardiff acuity test gratings spatial frequency spectrum vanishing optotypes visual acuity |
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