Publication year
2012Number of pages
5 p.
Source
Strabismus, 20, 2, (2012), pp. 44-48ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI ON
Journal title
Strabismus
Volume
vol. 20
Issue
iss. 2
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 44
Page end
p. 48
Subject
Social DevelopmentAbstract
Purpose: This study evaluated the effect of an evidence-based magnifier training on viewing behavior in visually impaired children aged 3 to 6½ years.
Methods: Effects of a training with a stand magnifier were evaluated by analyzing recordings of 21 visually impaired children, obtained from a miniature camera mounted in the magnifier. In a pre-test, post-test design, 11 of the children trained without magnifier and 10 children trained with magnifier. Three measures were compared from pre- to post-test assessment: 1) observation time in seconds through the magnifier during task performance; 2) the eye that was used during task performance with the magnifier (right eye/left eye as recorded by the camera); and 3) the self-chosen eye-to-chart distance (in cm) in near visual acuity measurement.
Results: Three important changes were found by analyzing the eye-camera recordings:
(1) There was a significant shift in average observation time (i.e., the duration of looking through the magnifier in a single glance), before and after training. In the pre-test children used less than 10 s for a glance through the magnifier, whereas in the post-test this was 10–30 s.
(2) In 5 children there was no preference with respect to the number of glances through the magnifier with right or left eye during pre-test measurement. However, such a task-specific dominance was clearly observed in this subgroup after training (post-test measurement).
(3) The eye-to-chart distance, as measured during near-vision testing with LH-single and LH-line test, decreased significantly over the training period (from 9.5 cm to 7.9 cm, pre- to post-test).
There were no differences in the outcome measures between the with-magnifier and without-magnifier training groups. We can conclude that (1) the magnifier training had a positive effect on viewing behavior and the development of dominance, and (2) camera observations provide valuable data on children’s viewing behavior.
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- Academic publications [243110]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [29977]
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