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Chronobiology International
The Journal of Biological and Medical Rhythm Research
Volume 17, 2000 - Issue 2
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Original

VISUAL RESOLUTION IN HUMANS FLUCTUATES OVER THE 24H PERIOD*

, , , &
Pages 187-195 | Received 25 May 1999, Accepted 13 Sep 1999, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The present experiment was designed to assess daily fluctuations of visual discriminability, a function reflecting the resolution power of the visual sensitivity by measure of a differential threshold. Sixteen subjects underwent a visual discrimination threshold task (using the constant method) in a protocol allowing one point every 2h over the 24h period. The results show that the visual discrimination threshold is low in the morning and increases progressively over the day, reaching a first peak at 22:00. During the night, the same pattern occurs, with low threshold levels at the beginning of the night and high levels at the end. This profile is quite different from that of detection threshold variations, suggesting that the two visual functions are under the control of different underlying mechanisms. Two interpretations could account for this discrepancy. The first relates to different oscillators in the eye for detection and discrimination. The second refers to a possible linkage of visual discriminability with the sleep-wake cycle since threshold measures were systematically low (i.e., high resolution power) after long sleep periods. (Chronobiology International, 17(12), 187–195, 2000)

Notes

This work was supported by la Fundation MAIF, Paris, France.

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