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Adaptive Optics for Vision Science: Principles, Practices, Design, and Applications

ISBN: 978-0-471-91464-8

July 2006

624 pages

Description
Leading experts present the latest technology and applications in adaptive optics for vision science

Featuring contributions from the foremost researchers in the field, Adaptive Optics for Vision Science is the first book devoted entirely to providing the fundamentals of adaptive optics along with its practical applications in vision science. The material for this book stems from collaborations fostered by the Center for Adaptive Optics, a consortium of more than thirty universities, government laboratories, and corporations.

Although the book is written primarily for researchers in vision science and ophthalmology, the field of adaptive optics has strong roots in astronomy. Researchers in both fields share this technology and, for this reason, the book includes chapters by both astronomers and vision scientists.

Following the introduction, chapters are divided into the following sections:

  • Wavefront Measurement and Correction
  • Retinal Imaging Applications
  • Vision Correction Applications
  • Design Examples

Readers will discover the remarkable proliferation of new applications of wavefront-related technologies developed for the human eye. For example, the book explores how wavefront sensors offer the promise of a new generation of vision correction methods that can deal with higher order aberrations beyond defocus and astigmatism, and how adaptive optics can produce images of the living retina with unprecedented resolution.

An appendix includes the Optical Society of America's Standards for Reporting Optical Aberrations. A glossary of terms and a symbol table are also included.

Adaptive Optics for Vision Science arms engineers, scientists, clinicians, and students with the basic concepts, engineering tools, and techniques needed to master adaptive optics applications in vision science and ophthalmology. Moreover, readers will discover the latest thinking and findings from the leading innovators in the field.

About the Author
Jason Porter, PhD, is a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Rochester's Center for Visual Science in the laboratory of Dr. David R. Williams.

Julianna E. Lin, M.Eng, is a member of the Research and Technology Staff for the Xerox Innovation Group at the Wilson Center for Research and Technology in Webster, NY.  

Hope Marcotte Queener, M.Sc, is an Application Developer at the University of Houston College of Optometry.

Karen Thorn

Abdul Awwal, PhD, is a Research Scientist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.