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Featured researches published by Irene Campus.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Accommodation in Astigmatic Children During Visual Task Performance

Erin M. Harvey; Joseph M. Miller; Howard P. Apple; Pavan Parashar; J. Daniel Twelker; Mabel Crescioni; Amy L. Davis; Tina K. Leonard-Green; Irene Campus; Duane L. Sherrill

PURPOSE To determine the accuracy and stability of accommodation in uncorrected children during visual task performance. METHODS Subjects were second- to seventh-grade children from a highly astigmatic population. Measurements of noncycloplegic right eye spherical equivalent (Mnc) were obtained while uncorrected subjects performed three visual tasks at near (40 cm) and distance (2 m). Tasks included reading sentences with stimulus letter size near acuity threshold and an age-appropriate letter size (high task demands) and viewing a video (low task demand). Repeated measures ANOVA assessed the influence of astigmatism, task demand, and accommodative demand on accuracy (mean Mnc) and variability (mean SD of Mnc) of accommodation. RESULTS For near and distance analyses, respectively, sample size was 321 and 247, mean age was 10.37 (SD 1.77) and 10.30 (SD 1.74) years, mean cycloplegic M was 0.48 (SD 1.10) and 0.79 diopters (D) (SD 1.00), and mean astigmatism was 0.99 (SD 1.15) and 0.75 D (SD 0.96). Poor accommodative accuracy was associated with high astigmatism, low task demand (video viewing), and high accommodative demand. The negative effect of accommodative demand on accuracy increased with increasing astigmatism, with the poorest accommodative accuracy observed in high astigmats (≥3.00 D) with high accommodative demand/high hyperopia (1.53 D and 2.05 D of underaccommodation for near and distant stimuli, respectively). Accommodative variability was greatest in high astigmats and was uniformly high across task condition. No/low and moderate astigmats showed higher variability for the video task than the reading tasks. CONCLUSIONS Accuracy of accommodation is reduced in uncorrected children with high astigmatism and high accommodative demand/high hyperopia, but improves with increased visual task demand (reading). High astigmats showed the greatest variability in accommodation.


Journal of Ophthalmology | 2016

Convergence Insufficiency, Accommodative Insufficiency, Visual Symptoms, and Astigmatism in Tohono O’odham Students

Amy L. Davis; Erin M. Harvey; J. Daniel Twelker; Joseph M. Miller; Tina K. Leonard-Green; Irene Campus

Purpose. To determine rate of convergence insufficiency (CI) and accommodative insufficiency (AI) and assess the relation between CI, AI, visual symptoms, and astigmatism in school-age children. Methods. 3rd–8th-grade students completed the Convergence Insufficiency Symptom Survey (CISS) and binocular vision testing with correction if prescribed. Students were categorized by astigmatism magnitude (no/low: <1.00 D, moderate: 1.00 D to <3.00 D, and high: ≥3.00 D), presence/absence of clinical signs of CI and AI, and presence of symptoms. Analyses determine rate of clinical CI and AI and symptomatic CI and AI and assessed the relation between CI, AI, visual symptoms, and astigmatism. Results. In the sample of 484 students (11.67 ± 1.81 years of age), rate of symptomatic CI was 6.2% and symptomatic AI 18.2%. AI was more common in students with CI than without CI. Students with AI only (p = 0.02) and with CI and AI (p = 0.001) had higher symptom scores than students with neither CI nor AI. Moderate and high astigmats were not at increased risk for CI or AI. Conclusions. With-the-rule astigmats are not at increased risk for CI or AI. High comorbidity rates of CI and AI and higher symptoms scores with AI suggest that research is needed to determine symptomatology specific to CI.


Journal of Ophthalmology | 2017

Visual Motor and Perceptual Task Performance in Astigmatic Students

Erin M. Harvey; J. Daniel Twelker; Joseph M. Miller; Tina K. Leonard-Green; Kathleen M. Mohan; Amy L. Davis; Irene Campus

Purpose. To determine if spectacle corrected and uncorrected astigmats show reduced performance on visual motor and perceptual tasks. Methods. Third through 8th grade students were assigned to the low refractive error control group (astigmatism < 1.00 D, myopia < 0.75 D, hyperopia < 2.50 D, and anisometropia < 1.50 D) or bilateral astigmatism group (right and left eye ≥ 1.00 D) based on cycloplegic refraction. Students completed the Beery-Buktenica Developmental Test of Visual Motor Integration (VMI) and Visual Perception (VMIp). Astigmats were randomly assigned to testing with/without correction and control group was tested uncorrected. Analyses compared VMI and VMIp scores for corrected and uncorrected astigmats to the control group. Results. The sample included 333 students (control group 170, astigmats tested with correction 75, and astigmats tested uncorrected 88). Mean VMI score in corrected astigmats did not differ from the control group (p = 0.829). Uncorrected astigmats had lower VMI scores than the control group (p = 0.038) and corrected astigmats (p = 0.007). Mean VMIp scores for uncorrected (p = 0.209) and corrected astigmats (p = 0.124) did not differ from the control group. Uncorrected astigmats had lower mean scores than the corrected astigmats (p = 0.003). Conclusions. Uncorrected astigmatism influences visual motor and perceptual task performance. Previously spectacle treated astigmats do not show developmental deficits on visual motor or perceptual tasks when tested with correction.


Optometry and Vision Science | 2017

Interrater and test-retest reliability of the beery visual-motor integration in schoolchildren

Erin M. Harvey; Tina K. Leonard-Green; Kathleen M. Mohan; Marjean Taylor Kulp; Amy L. Davis; Joseph M. Miller; J. Daniel Twelker; Irene Campus; Leslie K. Dennis

PURPOSE To assess interrater and test-retest reliability of the 6th Edition Beery-Buktenica Developmental Test of Visual-Motor Integration (VMI) and test-retest reliability of the VMI Visual Perception Supplemental Test (VMIp) in school-age children. METHODS Subjects were 163 Native American third- to eighth-grade students with no significant refractive error (astigmatism <1.00 D, myopia <0.75 D, hyperopia <2.50 D, anisometropia <1.50 D) or ocular abnormalities. The VMI and VMIp were administered twice, on separate days. All VMI tests were scored by two trained scorers, and a subset of 50 tests was also scored by an experienced scorer. Scorers strictly applied objective scoring criteria. Analyses included interrater and test-retest assessments of bias, 95% limits of agreement, and intraclass correlation analysis. RESULTS Trained scorers had no significant scoring bias compared with the experienced scorer. One of the two trained scorers tended to provide higher scores than the other (mean difference in standardized scores = 1.54). Interrater correlations were strong (0.75 to 0.88). VMI and VMIp test-retest comparisons indicated no significant bias (subjects did not tend to score better on retest). Test-retest correlations were moderate (0.54 to 0.58). The 95% limits of agreement for the VMI were -24.14 to 24.67 (scorer 1) and -26.06 to 26.58 (scorer 2), and the 95% limits of agreement for the VMIp were -27.11 to 27.34. CONCLUSIONS The 95% limit of agreement for test-retest differences will be useful for determining if the VMI and VMIp have sufficient sensitivity for detecting change with treatment in both clinical and research settings. Further research on test-retest reliability reporting 95% limits of agreement for children across different age ranges is recommended, particularly if the test is to be used to detect changes due to intervention or treatment.


Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus | 2016

Assessment of grating acuity in infants and toddlers using an electronic acuity card: The Dobson Card

Kathleen M. Mohan; Joseph M. Miller; Erin M. Harvey; Kimberly Gerhart; Howard P. Apple; Deborah Apple; Jordana M. Smith; Amy L. Davis; Tina K. Leonard-Green; Irene Campus; Leslie K. Dennis

PURPOSE To determine if testing binocular visual acuity in infants and toddlers using the Acuity Card Procedure (ACP) with electronic grating stimuli yields clinically useful data. METHODS Participants were infants and toddlers ages 5 to 36.7 months referred by pediatricians due to failed automated vision screening. The ACP was used to test binocular grating acuity. Stimuli were presented on the Dobson Card. The Dobson Card consists of a handheld matte-black plexiglass frame with two flush-mounted tablet computers and is similar in size and form to commercially available printed grating acuity testing stimuli (Teller Acuity Cards II [TACII]; Stereo Optical, Inc., Chicago, IL). On each trial, one tablet displayed a square-wave grating and the other displayed a luminance-matched uniform gray patch. Stimuli were roughly equivalent to the stimuli available in the printed TACII stimuli. After acuity testing, each child received a cycloplegic eye examination. Based on cycloplegic retinoscopy, patients were categorized as having high or low refractive error per American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus vision screening referral criteria. Mean acuities for high and low refractive error groups were compared using analysis of covariance, controlling for age. RESULTS Mean visual acuity was significantly poorer in children with high refractive error than in those with low refractive error (P = .015). CONCLUSIONS Electronic stimuli presented using the ACP can yield clinically useful measurements of grating acuity in infants and toddlers. Further research is needed to determine the optimal conditions and procedures for obtaining accurate and clinically useful automated measurements of visual acuity in infants and toddlers.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Inter-Scorer and Test-Retest Reliability of the Beery-Buktenica Developmental Test of Visual-Motor Integration in School-Age Children

Erin M. Harvey; Tina K. Green; Kathleen M. Mohan; Marjean Taylor Kulp; Amy H. T. Davis; Joseph M. Miller; John Daniel Twelker; Irene Campus


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

Validation of self-reported spectacle compliance among school aged children and parents using Rasch analysis

Mabel Crescioni; Terri L. Warholak; Erin M. Harvey; Tina K. Green; Irene Campus; John Daniel Twelker; Joseph M. Miller


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

Performance of the SPOT and PlusoptiX Photoscreeners in a highly astigmatic population

Erin M. Harvey; Mabel Crescioni; Irene Campus; Tina K. Green; Joseph M. Miller


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

Comparison of best-corrected vs uncorrected performance on the Beery VMI Developmental Test of Visual Perception in astigmatic children

Tina K. Green; Amy H. T. Davis; Mabel Crescioni; Irene Campus; Kathleen M. Mohan; John Daniel Twelker; Joseph M. Miller; Erin M. Harvey


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

Identification of young children for participation in studies of spectacle correction through pediatric primary care clinics: A pilot study

Irene Campus; Kimberly Gerhart; Jordana M. Smith; Amy H. T. Davis; Joseph M. Miller; Erin M. Harvey

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