Adaptive Optics for Vision Science

Chapter 10.2 - Conventional Imaging

10.2   CONVENTIONAL IMAGING

Conventional imaging in the eye consists of flood illuminating the retina and
then recording, with a two-dimensional (2D) detector, the refl ected light that
exits the eye. This approach was first exploited by Helmholtz around 1850
using a light source, a mirror with a hole, and his own eye as the detector [1].
Observations of the retina were initially recorded in hand paintings and then
replaced by photographic film, with the first successful photograph of the
human retina taken in 1886 using a 2.5-minute exposure [2]. The next 100
years produced a steady advance in better light sources (in particular, the
electronic flash lamp), film quality, procedures to collect retinal photographs,
and more recently, the use of highly sensitive electronic cameras and automated
computer-driven systems. Today, the conventional (modern) ophthalmoscope
is an indispensable tool in the clinic for diagnosing the health of the
posterior eye. Interestingly, it was not until AO was recently integrated into
the conventional ophthalmoscope that its optical resolution improved beyond
that observed by Helmholtz more than 150 years ago.

 

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