Abstract

Chromatic composition of displays might affect vision and accommodation,possibly influencing myopia development.We investigated differences in visual acuity(VA) and accommodative lag(AccL) for steady accommodative demands (up to 5D,1D steps) with visual stimuli illuminated by monochromatic wavelengths (mono-λ 480,555&630nm,3nm bandwidth) and white light (WL).Data was obtained on 3 young emmetrope using an Adaptive Optics system with a supercontinuum laser,a DMD for stimuli,and a optunable lens to change vergence.Best focus for far was set at 555nm.VA was measured using QUEST(tumbling E).AccL was obtained from the peak shift of through-focus Visual Strehl,calculated from HS aberrometry.All subjects showed myopic shifts in blue consistent with longitudinal chromatic aberration.However,the response to wavelength differed across subjects.S#1 showed a sustained VA across distances(average VA standard deviation 0.054,-0.005logMAR),low AccL(slope:0.3 D/D) and systematic SA negative shift (slope:-0.04um/D),similar across mono-λ and WL.S#2 showed a more sustained VA,lower AccL and higher SA change in blue (0.09logMAR std,0.3D/D,-0.02um/D) than in WL(0.14logMAR std,0.52D/D,-0.013um/D).S#3 showed a steeper decrease in VA at near and higher AccL for mono-λ(0.218logMAR std,0.78D/D,on average)than in WL(0.05logMAR std,0.38D/D).Different subjects use chromatic cues in different ways to accommodate,likely affected by the interplay of chromatic blur,depth-of-focus and defocus sign perception.

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