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The Visual Effects of Intraocular Colored Filters
Author(s) -
Billy R. Hammond
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
scientifica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.474
H-Index - 21
ISSN - 2090-908X
DOI - 10.6064/2012/424965
Subject(s) - visual pigments , glare , colored , chromatic scale , haze , ingenuity , intraocular lenses , refractive error , computer science , iris (biosensor) , optometry , human eye , optics , computer vision , intraocular lens , visual acuity , ophthalmology , medicine , retinal , materials science , physics , nanotechnology , layer (electronics) , rhodopsin , biometrics , composite material , neoclassical economics , meteorology , economics
Modern life is associated with a myriad of visual problems, most notably refractive conditions such as myopia. Human ingenuity has addressed such problems using strategies such as spectacle lenses or surgical correction. There are other visual problems, however, that have been present throughout our evolutionary history and are not as easily solved by simply correcting refractive error. These problems include issues like glare disability and discomfort arising from intraocular scatter, photostress with the associated transient loss in vision that arises from short intense light exposures, or the ability to see objects in the distance through a veil of atmospheric haze. One likely biological solution to these more long-standing problems has been the use of colored intraocular filters. Many species, especially diurnal, incorporate chromophores from numerous sources (e.g., often plant pigments called carotenoids) into ocular tissues to improve visual performance outdoors. This review summarizes information on the utility of such filters focusing on chromatic filtering by humans.

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