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Dive into the research topics where Daniel R. Coates is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel R. Coates.


Optometry and Vision Science | 2013

Factors affecting crowded acuity: eccentricity and contrast.

Daniel R. Coates; Jeremy M. Chin; Susana T. L. Chung

Purpose Acuity measurement is a fundamental method to assess visual performance in the clinic. Little is known about how acuity measured in the presence of neighboring letters, as in the case of letter charts, changes with contrast and with nonfoveal viewing. This information is crucial for acuity measurement using low-contrast charts and when patients cannot use their fovea. In this study, we evaluated how optotype acuity, with and without flankers, is affected by contrast and eccentricity. Methods Five young adults with normal vision identified the orientation of a Tumbling-E presented alone or in the presence of four flanking Tumbling-Es. Edge-to-edge letter spacing ranged from 1 to 20 bar widths. Stimuli were presented on a white background for 150 ms with Weber contrast ranging from −2.5% to −99%. Flankers had the same size and contrast as the target. Testings were performed at the fovea, 3°, 5°, and 10° in the inferior visual field. Results When plotted as a function of letter spacing, acuity remains unaffected by the presence of flankers until the flankers are within the critical spacing, which averages an edge-to-edge spacing of 4.4 bar widths at the fovea and approximately 16 bar widths at all three eccentricities. Critical spacing decreases with a reduction in contrast. When plotted as a function of contrast, acuity only worsens when the contrast falls below approximately 24% at the fovea and 17% in the periphery, for flanked and unflanked conditions alike. Conclusions The letter spacing on conventional letter charts exceeds the critical spacing for acuity measurement at the fovea, at all contrast levels. Thus, these charts are appropriate for assessing foveal acuity. In the periphery, the critical spacing is larger than the letter spacing on conventional charts. Consequently, these charts may underestimate the acuity measured in the periphery because of the effects of crowding.


Vision Research | 2014

Contour interaction in foveal vision: A response to Siderov, Waugh, and Bedell (2013)

Daniel R. Coates; Dennis M. Levi


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

Changes across the psychometric function following perceptual learning of an RSVP reading task

Daniel R. Coates; Susana T. L. Chung


Journal of Vision | 2013

Acuity, contrast, eccentricity, and crowding

Daniel R. Coates; Jeremy M. Chin; Susana T. L. Chung


Vision Research | 2016

Crowding in the S-cone pathway

Daniel R. Coates; Susana T. L. Chung


Archive | 2015

Quantifying crowded and uncrowded letter recognition

Daniel R. Coates


Journal of Vision | 2014

A kindler, gentler adaptive psychophysical procedure

Daniel R. Coates; Susana Chung


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Optimal stimulus placement for psychometric function estimation

Daniel R. Coates; Susana T. L. Chung


Journal of Vision | 2013

Coarse-to-fine spatial analysis for identifying multiple letters?

Susana T. L. Chung; Girish Kumar; Daniel R. Coates


Journal of Vision | 2013

Predicting reading performance for different fonts using physical and perceptual properties of letters

Jean-Baptiste Bernard; Daniel R. Coates; Susana T. L. Chung

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Susana Chung

University of California

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Jeremy M. Chin

University of California

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Girish Kumar

University of California

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