Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
Doi
Abstract
15 páginas, 8 figuras, 2 tablas.The problem of measuring the objective refractive error with an aberrometer has shown to be more elusive than expected.
Here, the formalism of differential geometry is applied to develop a theoretical framework of refractive error sensing. At each
point of the pupil, the local refractive error is given by the wavefront curvature, which is a 2 2 symmetric matrix, whose
elements are directly related to sphere, cylinder, and axis. Aberrometers usually measure the local gradient of the
wavefront. Then refractive error sensing consists of differentiating the gradient, instead of integrating as in wavefront
sensing. A statistical approach is proposed to pass from the local to the global (clinically meaningful) refractive error, in\ud
which the best correction is assumed to be the maximum likelihood estimation. In the practical implementation, this
corresponds to the mode of the joint histogram of the 3 different elements of the curvature matrix. Results obtained both in
computer simulations and with real data provide a close agreement and consistency with the main optical image quality
metrics such as the Strehl ratio.This research has been supported by the Spanish
CICyT, Grant FIS2008-00697, and Red Española de
Optometría (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación,
SAF2008-01114-E).Peer reviewe