[visionlist] Seeing and Perceiving Feature Issue “Clinical Vision Science”
Susana Chung
s.chung at berkeley.edu
Fri Dec 24 23:51:24 GMT 2010
Seeing and Perceiving Feature Issue “Clinical Vision Science”
***New submission deadline: February 28, 2011***
Our Journal, Seeing and Perceiving, the continuation of Spatial
Vision, is committed to contribute to new developments in clinical as
well as basic vision science, and especially to the translation and
integration between basic and clinical research, on a continuing
basis. To this end we have broadened our Editorial Board to include
clinical vision scientists, and we are now inviting authors to
contribute to an initial Special Issue on “Clinical Vision Science”,
with the expectation of future papers and debates in this area being
published in regular issues in the Journal.
Much of what we know about the visual capability of individuals with
visual or developmental disorders comes from applying vigorous basic
research methods to the study of clinical patients. Moreover, basic
research has formed the basis for the development of many clinical
tests that are now routinely used in clinical settings: e.g., the
Bailey-Lovie Visual Acuity Chart, the Pelli-Robson contrast
sensitivity chart, the grading system for cataracts and other ocular
abnormalities, and the development of SWAP (short-wavelength automated
perimetry) for identifying early glaucomatous changes. In addition,
clinicians now rely on the theory of signal detection to diagnose
whether or not a patient has a certain eye disease. In short, all of
us have benefited tremendously from the creative applications of basic
research to addressing issues that have relevance to everyday life.
The scope of the feature issue covers all areas of vision science that
address issues of clinical importance, or bear direct or implied
relevance to everyday activities for people with a normal visual
system. Examples of potential topics include, but are not limited to,
the following:
• visual requirements for everyday tasks (e.g. reading, face
recognition, mobility, driving, navigation)
• efforts to minimize the impact of visual or developmental
disorders on performing everyday tasks
• methods to improve the performance on everyday tasks for
individuals with visual or developmental disorders
• development of efficient psychophysical methods or new clinical
tests to evaluate visual performance in clinical patients
• development of new statistical or analytical tools that will
improve the reliability of analysis based on sparse data-set from
clinical patients
• new knowledge about the visual system that can be drawn based
on the findings from clinical patients
Complete manuscripts of previously unpublished original research or
review articles should be prepared according to the Instructions to
Authors published on the website of Seeing and Perceiving (www.brill.nl/sp)
. Please submit your manuscript by February 28, 2011. Articles are
placed on-line as soon as they are accepted and processed. Articles
will be then brought together and published in one or two bound
Special Issues. We anticipate that the Special Issues will appear in
the Summer of 2011. Papers which are accepted earlier than this, once
on-line, will be fully citable via a DOI number.
Enquiries about this feature issue can be sent to:
Susana Chung, Co-Editor for this Issue, s.chung at berkeley.edu
Zhong-lin Lu, Co-Editor for this Issue, zhonglin at usc.edu
Concetta Morrone, Editor-in-Chief, concetta at in.cnr.it
Adam Reeves, Editor-in-Chief, reeves at neu.edu
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