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Journal Article

Citation

Corlett E, White MA. Proc. Australas. Road Safety Res. Policing Educ. Conf. 2003; 7(1): 54-61.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, copyright holder varies, Publisher Monash University)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

A new testing procedure for peripheral vision that involves the measurement of spatial masking ('crowding') has recently completed the first stage of the validation process. The computer-controlled test determines observers' pattern-recognition capacities in the peripheral visual field by measuring their ability to recognise 'crowded' targets, analogous to the 'real-world' capacity to recognise an individual cyclist at a busy intersection in peripheral vision. The test incorporates proven vision research techniques, and the most appropriate masking (flanking) stimuli. Older adults characteristically perform less well on visual tasks than their younger counterparts. The ultimate aim of the research program is to explore the question of why older people are over represented in crashes at intersections, with the long-term objective of facilitating a reduction in the number of such crashes. Older people experienced more difficulty in the peripheral pattern recognition tasks than their younger counterparts, especially when the patterns were flanked.

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