Paper
17 May 1982 Measurement Of Ocular Counterrolling (OCR) By Polarized Light
Robert V. Kenyon, Byron K. Lichtenberg
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Ocular counterrolling (OCR) and torsion refer to twisting eye movements that rotate the eyes about the line of sight. OCR is useful in assessing the activation of the gravito-inertial sensors (otoliths) of the inner ear (vestibular system). Information on otolith function is used in medical and experimental work on human orientation. As valuable as this information is, continuous measurement of OCR is still not readily available. This paper describes a method of continuously measuring OCR using polarized light, a system of polarizers and a contact lens. A polarized hard contact lens is placed between two soft lenses and caused to adhere to the eye by soaking in deionized water. The phase difference between the incident rotating polarized light and the reflected light from this lens gives a measure of eye torsion with little contamination from other eye movement modes. Application and performance of this instrument will be discussed.
© (1982) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Robert V. Kenyon and Byron K. Lichtenberg "Measurement Of Ocular Counterrolling (OCR) By Polarized Light", Proc. SPIE 0307, Polarizers and Applications, (17 May 1982); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.965910
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KEYWORDS
Eye

Polarizers

Contact lenses

Optical character recognition

Sensors

Photography

Vestibular system

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