articleInvestigative Ophthalmology & Visual ScienceNov 22, 2004Closed access

Rapid Quantification of Adult and Developing Mouse Spatial Vision Using a Virtual Optomotor System

University of Lethbridge · University of British Columbia

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Methods

A rotating cylinder covered with a vertical sine wave grating was calculated and drawn in virtual three-dimensional (3-D) space on four computer monitors facing to form a square. C57BL/6 mice standing unrestrained on a platform in the center of the square tracked the grating with reflexive head and neck movements. The spatial frequency of the grating was clamped at the viewing position by repeatedly recentering the cylinder on the head. Acuity was quantified by increasing the spatial frequency of the grating until an optomotor response could not be elicited. Contrast sensitivity was measured at spatial frequencies between 0.03 and 0.35 cyc/deg.

Results

Grating acuity was measurable on the day of eye opening (postnatal day [P]15: mean acuity, 0.031 cyc/deg) and reached a maximum (approximately 0.4 cyc/deg) by P24. A peak in the contrast sensitivity function emerged on P16 (4.7, or 21% contrast at 0.064 cyc/deg). The peak remained at 0.064 cyc/deg and climbed to a maximum sensitivity of 24.5, or 4% contrast, by P29. Acuity was obtained in each mouse in

Citation impact

805
total citations
FWCI
11.68
Percentile
100%
References
18
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Grating
  • Spatial frequency
  • Contrast (vision)
  • Optics
  • Sensitivity (control systems)
  • Visual acuity
  • Physics
  • Engineering
No related works found for this paper.