Colour Vision Deficiences VIII brings together information on the latest trends in the following areas of research: -Visual effects of intense lights; -Effects of intoxications on colour vision; -Ageing and vision; -Methods of examination; -Congenital defects; -Acquired defects; -Practical aspects; -Physiological bases.
This volume is a natural follow-up on Volumes VI and VII published in 1981 and 1983 respectively by Dr. W. Junk Publishers.
Proceedings of the Eighth Symposium of the International Research Group on Colour Vision Deficiences held at the Palais des Papes, Avignon, France, June 23-26, 1985
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1. Obituaries.- Dr W.S. Stiles (19011985).- Yves Le Grand (19081986).-
2. Visual Effects of Intense Lights.- Intense spectral light induced color
blindness in Rhesus monkeys (invited paper).- A case of blue-yellow defect
induced by intense blue light.- Colour vision changes following different
types and amounts of argon laser photocoagulation in the treatment of
diabetic retinopathy.-
3. Effects of Intoxications on Colour Vision.- Colour
vision deficiencies caused by pharmacotherapy (invited paper).- Cone
interactions in drug-induced retinal dysfunctions.- Colour vision in patients
suspected of intoxication.- Color vision test with standard
Pseudoisochromatic Plates Part 2 for Ethambutol-induced optic neuropathy.-
On the assessment of visual impairment in drug-addicts: Colour discrimination
versus eye mascular performance.- Retinal canthaxanthin thesaurismosis;
Functional evaluations.- ERG and chlorpromazine-induced ocular
intoxications.-
4. Ageing and Vision.- Colour vision and age (invited
paper).- Comparisons across age of selected visual functions.- The effect of
age on color discrimination: A field study on the road at night.- Decline of
contrast perception and colour sensitivity with age.-
5. Methods of
Examination.- Viewing time A neglected parameter in colour vision
assessment?.- An evaluation of the standard pseudoisochromatic plates (SPP 1)
in clinical use.- Detection of acquired color vision defects by Standard
Pseudo isochromatic Plates Part 2.- A. Tritan Album.- Screening functional
color vision anomalies: A comparison of the City University and AO-HRR tests
on children.- A new method for presenting the results of the 28-Hue test by
means of numerical scores.- An analysis of the results of the
Farnsworth-Munsell 100-Hue Test in acquiredblue-yellow defects.- Results of a
shortened Lightness Discrimination Test.- Some observations on colour vision
of young children during screening examinations.- Specificity evaluation of
the OSCAR color vision test.- About the OSCAR Test.- A new computer graphics
test for red/green colour anomaly.- Experimental trials on a modified
Engelking equation.- The diagnosis of acquired colour vision deficiencies by
means of metameric matches (using the Besançon anomalometer).- Photometric
data of the Besançon anomalometer.- Further development of the LED pocket
anomaloscope.- Tritan screening with a modified TNO test.- Validation
trials on an optimum blue-green equation.- A simple clinical test of blue
cone sensitivity in early eye disease.- Critical flicker frequencies with
red, green and yellow lights in congenital and acquired colour vision
deficiencies.- Le différentiateur de tonalité: An apparatus for measuring
wavelength discrimination.- Improved clinical technique for Wald-Marré
functions.- Color contrast perimetry: Hue discrimination defects in acquired
dyschromatopsias.- Automatic perimetric exploration of the differential
threshold for different coloured lights.- Human electroretinogram measures of
retinal blue cone pathway sensitivity.- Requirements for lantern tests.- of
Chinese designed colour vision testing charts and instrument.-
6. Congenital
Defects.- Application of a model to the evaluation of color vision tests and
to the design of instruments visualizing the color perception of dichromats.-
Protanomalous opponent colour vision.- Mesopic dueteranopic vision:
Two-dimensional versus three-dimensional.- A new analysis of spectral
sensitivity curves from Hsia and Graham.- A case report of deuteranopia with
ocular albinism: A variant ofForsius-Eriksson syndrome.- Colour asthenopia
and colour amblyopia.- Hereditary colour vision defects in Mali (scholar
survey with the Ishihara text).-
7. Acquired Defects.- Colour vision in
aphakia and pseudophakia.- Central colour vision in aphakia and
pseudophakia.- Colour vision in pseudophakic eyes.- Colour vision in aphakic
and pseudophakic patients.- Rayleigh color matches in central serous
chorioretinopathy with congenital color vision defects.- Color vision deficit
in diabetic retinopathy: Application of Kitahara scoring technique.- Diabetic
dyschromatopsia: Pathogenic hypothesis.- Colour vision studies in families
with dominant optic atrophy.- Pathophysiological considerations in dominant
optic atrophy based upon spectral sensitivity, tritanomaloscopy, blue
perimetry and visual electrophysiology.- Sources of short-wavelength
sensitivity loss in glaucoma.- Contrast sensitivity in glaucoma: its relation
to the loss of luminosity.- Colour evoked potentials in demyelinating
disease.-
8. Practical Aspects.- Evidence for an effect by colour defect on
school achievement.- The influence of diabetic dyschromatopsia on the
interpretation of self-monitoring coloured reagent strips.- Influence of
color vision deficiencies on home blood glucose monitoring.- Study of visual
performance on a multi-color VDU of color-defective and normal trichromatic
subjects.- Ergonomically optimal colours for colour-defective CRT operators.-
The X-Chrom lens does it have any effect on colour perception of
colour-deficient observers?.-
9. Physiological Bases.- The chromatic
antagonisms of opponent process theory are not the same as those revealed in
studies of detection and discrimination.- Nonlinearity of yellow-blue
opponent-color system: Discrepancy between deuteranope and normaltrichromat.-
Are colours a real vectorial space?.- Characteristic of contrast vision.- The
evolution of trichromatic vision in the primates.- Variation of spatial
summation for color targets in normal photopic vision.- Protecting effects of
Ginkgo biloba extract on the retinal function.