Abstract

Previous research has shown an age-related decline in Useful Field of View (UFOV) test performance, which measures the duration required to extract relevant information from a scene in three subtasks. However, these results are mostly based on data that may have been confounded by (age-related) ocular diseases. We examined UFOV performance in subjects aged 19.5 to 70.3 years to investigate how UFOV performance changes throughout adulthood. All subjects underwent a thorough ophthalmological examination to exclude ocular disorders. We also examined some elementary visual functions, i.e., near and far visual acuity, crowding and contrast sensitivity. We investigated whether these functions were related to age and whether they could explain a possible age-related decline in UFOV performance. The subjects (n = 41) performed very well on almost every measure and reached far better UFOV and visual acuity scores than those reported by other studies that relied on self-reported absence of ocular pathology. We did not find significant relationships between age and any of the elementary visual functions or the first two UFOV subtasks (R2UFOV1 = 0.03, p = 0.25; R2UFOV2 = 0.07, p = 0.10). However, we found an age-related decline in performance on the third UFOV subtask (R2UFOV3 = 0.36, p < 0.001), which was unrelated to performance on the elementary visual function tasks. Our results show that performance on the first two UFOV subtasks as well as central elementary visual functions may remain high in the absence of obvious ophthalmological pathology.

Highlights

  • Many elderly people experience difficulties in their daily life activities that depend on visual functioning, such as driving, visual search and mobility

  • We identified some mild, non-pathological anomalies in our subjects’ eyes, we found no relationship between age and elementary visual functions or between elementary visual functions and Useful Field of View (UFOV) performance

  • Our results show that visual functioning remains high as long as there is no obvious ocular pathology

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Summary

Introduction

Many elderly people experience difficulties in their daily life activities that depend on visual functioning, such as driving, visual search and mobility. Traditional ophthalmological measures, such as visual acuity and visual field are sometimes incapable to capture these difficulties [1]. Effective use of visual information in daily life does require good quality. UFOV performance throughout adulthood funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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