4.3 Article

The effect of a short-wave filtering contact lens on color appearance

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JOURNAL OF VISION
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

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ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/jov.23.1.2

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The effect of a contact lens that filters short-wavelength visible light on color appearance was assessed. The results showed that this filtering lens did not significantly alter color appearance for both younger and older subjects.
We assessed the effect of a contact lens that filters short-wavelength (SW) visible light on color appearance. These effects were modeled and measured by direct comparison to a clear contact lens. Sixty-one subjects were enrolled, and 58 completed as cohort; 31 were 18 to 39 years old (mean +/- SD, 29.6 +/- 5.6), 27 were 40 to 65 years old (50.1 +/- 8.1). A double-masked contralateral design was used; participants randomly wore a SW-filtering contact lens on one eye and a clear control lens on the other eye. Subjects then mixed three primaries (including a short-wave primary, strongly within the absorbance of the test lens) until a perceived perfect neutral white was achieved with each eye. Color appearance was quantified using chromaticity coordinates measured with a spectral radiometer within a custom-built tricolorimeter. Color vision in natural scenes was simulated using hyperspectral images and cone fundamentals based on a standard observer. Overall, the chromaticity coordinates of matches that were set using the SW-filtering contact lens (n = 58; x = 0.345, y = 0.325, u' = 0.222, v' = 0.470) and clear contact lens (n = 58; x = 0.344, y = 0.325, u' = 0.223, v' = 0.471) were not significantly different, regardless of age group. Simulations indicated that, for natural scenes, the SW-filtering contact lens that was evaluated changes L/(L+M) and S/(L+M) chromatic contrast by no more than -1.4% to +1.1% and -36.9% to +5.0%, respectively. Tricolorimetry was used to measure color appearance in subjects wearing a SW-filtering lens in one eye and a clear lens in the other, and the results indicate that imparting a subtle tint to a contact lens, asin the SW-filtering lens that was evaluated, does not alter color appearance for younger or older subjects. A model of color vision predicted little effect of the lens on chromatic contrast for natural scenes.

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