Abstract

ABSTRACT Clinical relevance Peripheral vision is known to be critical for spatial navigation. However, visual cognition, which impacts peripheral vision, has not been studied extensively in glaucoma. Background Spatial memory was assessed with a known to induce a robust memory distortion called “boundary extension” in which participants erroneously remember seeing more of a scene than was present in the sensory input. Methods Fifteen patients with glaucoma and 15 age-matched normally sighted controls participated in the experiment. Participants were shown 10 photographs of natural scenes randomly displayed for 0.5 s or 10 s. Following each scene, the participant was asked to draw it from memory. Results On average, boundary extension was larger, by 12%, for patients than for controls, but the difference was significant for 4 photographs. Patients tended to add more space between the object and the edges than there was between the objects and the border of the photograph. A control experiment in which participants were asked to draw isolated objects without scene context resulted in a significant reduction of the memory distortion in both groups, but patients still drew the objects smaller than controls. Conclusion The reduced field of view in glaucoma has an impact on spatial memory for scenes and on perception of size.

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