Eye-pupil displacement and prediction: effects on residual wavefront in adaptive optics retinal imaging

This paper studies the effect of pupil displacements on the best achievable performance of retinal imaging adaptive optics (AO) systems, using 52 trajectories of horizontal and vertical displacements sampled at 80 Hz by a pupil tracker (PT) device on 13 different subjects. This effect is quantified...

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Published inBiomedical optics express Vol. 7; no. 3; pp. 1051 - 1073
Main Authors Kulcsár, Caroline, Raynaud, Henri-François, Garcia-Rissmann, Aurea
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Optical Society of America - OSA Publishing 01.03.2016
Optical Society of America
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ISSN2156-7085
2156-7085
DOI10.1364/BOE.7.001051

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Summary:This paper studies the effect of pupil displacements on the best achievable performance of retinal imaging adaptive optics (AO) systems, using 52 trajectories of horizontal and vertical displacements sampled at 80 Hz by a pupil tracker (PT) device on 13 different subjects. This effect is quantified in the form of minimal root mean square (rms) of the residual phase affecting image formation, as a function of the delay between PT measurement and wavefront correction. It is shown that simple dynamic models identified from data can be used to predict horizontal and vertical pupil displacements with greater accuracy (in terms of average rms) over short-term time horizons. The potential impact of these improvements on residual wavefront rms is investigated. These results allow to quantify the part of disturbances corrected by retinal imaging systems that are caused by relative displacements of an otherwise fixed or slowy-varying subject-dependent aberration. They also suggest that prediction has a limited impact on wavefront rms and that taking into account PT measurements in real time improves the performance of AO retinal imaging systems.
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PMCID: PMC4869933
ISSN:2156-7085
2156-7085
DOI:10.1364/BOE.7.001051