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Computerised perimetry

Heijl, A LU (1985) In Transactions of the ophthalmological societies of the United Kingdom 104(Pt 1). p.76-87
Abstract

During the last few years computerised perimetry has become a clinical reality. This new technique eliminates the operator's error, ensures reproducibility of test procedures and parameters and makes visual field testing of large numbers of patients possible. Great differences exist between computerised perimeters. Differences in hardware for example, the way in which stimuli or field charts are produced may be striking but even more important are differences in software, especially test algorithms. The results obtained with some instruments and test programmes are of such high quality that the same level of performance may be almost impossible to obtain with manual perimetry, at least in a clinical setting. Nevertheless, improvements... (More)

During the last few years computerised perimetry has become a clinical reality. This new technique eliminates the operator's error, ensures reproducibility of test procedures and parameters and makes visual field testing of large numbers of patients possible. Great differences exist between computerised perimeters. Differences in hardware for example, the way in which stimuli or field charts are produced may be striking but even more important are differences in software, especially test algorithms. The results obtained with some instruments and test programmes are of such high quality that the same level of performance may be almost impossible to obtain with manual perimetry, at least in a clinical setting. Nevertheless, improvements can be expected in the future particularly in adaptive tests and in computerised interpretation of the fields.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
keywords
Computers, Data Display, Humans, Microcomputers, Sensory Thresholds/physiology, Software, Vision, Ocular/physiology, Visual Field Tests/instrumentation, Visual Fields
in
Transactions of the ophthalmological societies of the United Kingdom
volume
104
issue
Pt 1
pages
12 pages
publisher
Churchill
external identifiers
  • pmid:3855342
  • scopus:0021919949
ISSN
0078-5334
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
71c50abf-d401-4073-9423-7703f7f292b1
date added to LUP
2019-06-30 16:29:33
date last changed
2025-01-09 18:19:47
@article{71c50abf-d401-4073-9423-7703f7f292b1,
  abstract     = {{<p>During the last few years computerised perimetry has become a clinical reality. This new technique eliminates the operator's error, ensures reproducibility of test procedures and parameters and makes visual field testing of large numbers of patients possible. Great differences exist between computerised perimeters. Differences in hardware for example, the way in which stimuli or field charts are produced may be striking but even more important are differences in software, especially test algorithms. The results obtained with some instruments and test programmes are of such high quality that the same level of performance may be almost impossible to obtain with manual perimetry, at least in a clinical setting. Nevertheless, improvements can be expected in the future particularly in adaptive tests and in computerised interpretation of the fields.</p>}},
  author       = {{Heijl, A}},
  issn         = {{0078-5334}},
  keywords     = {{Computers; Data Display; Humans; Microcomputers; Sensory Thresholds/physiology; Software; Vision, Ocular/physiology; Visual Field Tests/instrumentation; Visual Fields}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{Pt 1}},
  pages        = {{76--87}},
  publisher    = {{Churchill}},
  series       = {{Transactions of the ophthalmological societies of the United Kingdom}},
  title        = {{Computerised perimetry}},
  volume       = {{104}},
  year         = {{1985}},
}