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Research Article

No effect of age on spatial interval discrimination as a function of eccentricity or separation

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Pages 1010-1017 | Published online: 02 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

PURPOSE. Performance on positional acuity tasks exhibits marked resistance to the effects of optical image degradation. This places positional acuity tasks in a unique position for psychophysical examination of the effects of age upon visual performance because any observed age-related changes reflect losses in retinal/neural function. One positional acuity task with important consequences for "real-world" vision is spatial interval discrimination, a task in which the subject is required to detect changes in the size of the gap between two objects. In the present study we examine spatial interval discrimination in young and elderly observers as a function of separation and eccentricity. METHODS. Stimuli were two Gaussian-modulated luminance patches placed side by side around an imaginary iso-eccentric arc in the upper visual field, allowing eccentricity and separation to be varied independently. Changes in separation were achieved by moving the stimuli around the arc, while eccentricity was varied by changing the radius of the arc. Thresholds were obtained for healthy young and elderly observers using a forced-choice method of constants at two eccentricities (1.25° and 10°) and five separations. RESULTS. When thresholds, expressed as Weber fractions, are plotted as a function of the geometric ratio of the stimuli (separation/eccentricity) the data from the young and elderly groups collapse to a single function. Performance is independent of age and eccentricity, and depends only on the geometric ratio of the stimuli. CONCLUSIONS. No effect of age was found for spatial interval discrimination. Our results suggest that spatial interval discrimination belongs to the wider group of positional acuities whose neural substrates are unaffected by ageing.

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