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  1. Article ; Online: Characterizing the Randot Preschool stereotest: Testability, norms, reliability, specificity and sensitivity in children aged 2-11 years.

    Read, Jenny C A / Rafiq, Sheima / Hugill, Jess / Casanova, Therese / Black, Carla / O'Neill, Adam / Puyat, Vicente / Haggerty, Helen / Smart, Kathryn / Powell, Christine / Taylor, Kate / Clarke, Michael P / Vancleef, Kathleen

    PloS one

    2019  Volume 14, Issue 11, Page(s) e0224402

    Abstract: Purpose: To comprehensively assess the Randot Preschool stereo test in young children, including testability, normative values, test/retest reliability and sensitivity and specificity for detecting binocular vision disorders.: Methods: We tested 1005 ...

    Abstract Purpose: To comprehensively assess the Randot Preschool stereo test in young children, including testability, normative values, test/retest reliability and sensitivity and specificity for detecting binocular vision disorders.
    Methods: We tested 1005 children aged 2-11 years with the Randot Preschool stereo test, plus a cover/uncover test to detect heterotropia. Monocular visual acuity was assessed in both eyes using Keeler Crowded LogMAR visual acuity test for children aged 4 and over.
    Results: Testability was very high: 65% in two-year-olds, 92% in three-year-olds and ~100% in older children. Normative values: In 389 children aged 2-5 with apparently normal vision, 6% of children scored nil (stereoblind). In those who obtained a threshold, the mean log threshold was 2.06 log10 arcsec, corresponding to 114 arcsec, and the median threshold was 100 arcsec. Most older children score 40 arcsec, the best available score. We found a small sex difference, with girls scoring slightly but significantly better. Test/retest reliability: ~99% for obtaining any score vs nil. Agreement between stereo thresholds is poor in children aged 2-5; 95% limit of agreement = 0.7 log10 arcsec: five-fold change in stereo threshold may occur without any change in vision. In children over 5, the test essentially acts only as a binary classifier since almost all non-stereoblind children score 40 arcsec. Specificity (true negative rate): >95%. Sensitivity (true positive rate): poor, <50%, i.e. around half of children with a demonstrable binocular vision abnormality score well on the Randot Preschool.
    Conclusions: The Randot Preschool is extremely accessible for even very young children, and is very reliable at classifying children into those who have any stereo vision vs those who are stereoblind. However, its ability to quantify stereo vision is limited by poor repeatability in children aged 5 and under, and a very limited range of scores relevant to children aged over 5.
    MeSH term(s) Aged ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Depth Perception/physiology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Physical Examination ; Strabismus/diagnosis ; Strabismus/physiopathology ; Vision Disorders/diagnosis ; Vision Disorders/physiopathology ; Vision Tests/methods ; Vision, Binocular/physiology ; Visual Acuity/physiology
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-11-07
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2267670-3
    ISSN 1932-6203 ; 1932-6203
    ISSN (online) 1932-6203
    ISSN 1932-6203
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0224402
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article: ASTEROID: A New Clinical Stereotest on an Autostereo 3D Tablet.

    Vancleef, Kathleen / Serrano-Pedraza, Ignacio / Sharp, Craig / Slack, Gareth / Black, Carla / Casanova, Therese / Hugill, Jess / Rafiq, Sheima / Burridge, James / Puyat, Vito / Enongue, Josee Ewane / Gale, Henry / Akotei, Hannah / Collier, Zoe / Haggerty, Helen / Smart, Kathryn / Powell, Christine / Taylor, Kate / Clarke, Michael P /
    Morgan, Graham / Read, Jenny C A

    Translational vision science & technology

    2019  Volume 8, Issue 1, Page(s) 25

    Abstract: Purpose: To describe a new stereotest in the form of a game on an autostereoscopic tablet computer designed to be suitable for use in the eye clinic and present data on its reliability and the distribution of stereo thresholds in adults.: Methods: ... ...

    Abstract Purpose: To describe a new stereotest in the form of a game on an autostereoscopic tablet computer designed to be suitable for use in the eye clinic and present data on its reliability and the distribution of stereo thresholds in adults.
    Methods: Test stimuli were four dynamic random-dot stereograms, one of which contained a disparate target. Feedback was given after each trial presentation. A Bayesian adaptive staircase adjusted target disparity. Threshold was estimated from the mean of the posterior distribution after 20 responses. Viewing distance was monitored via a forehead sticker viewed by the tablet's front camera, and screen parallax was adjusted dynamically so as to achieve the desired retinal disparity.
    Results: The tablet must be viewed at a distance of greater than ∼35 cm to produce a good depth percept. Log thresholds were roughly normally distributed with a mean of 1.75 log
    Conclusions: ASTEROID is reliable, easy, and portable and thus well-suited for clinical stereoacuity measurements.
    Translational relevance: New 3D digital technology means that research-quality psychophysical measurement of stereoacuity is now feasible in the clinic.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-02-28
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2674602-5
    ISSN 2164-2591
    ISSN 2164-2591
    DOI 10.1167/tvst.8.1.25
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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