Cardiff Pediatric Contrast Test
This test is designed for contrast sensitivity
measurement in toddlers and young children, and in
older children or adults with intellectual impairment.
THE VALUE OF CONTRAST SENSITIVITY
Contrast sensitivity is the ability of the visual system
to detect large but faint targets. There are some
pathological conditions that reduce contrast
sensitivity without impairing visual acuity, and the
test will help in the identification of these conditions.
However, reduced contrast sensitivity and reduced
visual acuity often occur together, so that some (by
no means all) children with visual impairment also
have reduced contrast sensitivity. Tests for the two
functions are therefore complementary and
obtaining a measure of both will give a fuller
description of visual deficits than will one alone.
A child with visual impairment who retains good
contrast sensitivity will benefit from enlargement of
tasks – he or she sees large faint objects well. A
child with an equivalent acuity but with reduced
contrast sensitivity has a much more severe
impairment, and will not get the same benefit from
enlargement. Large objects as well as small objects
are difficult to see. So a measurement of contrast
sensitivity can help determine appropriate
management of a child’s impairment.
Treatment for visual deficits (including amblyopia
therapies) can result in improved contrast sensitivity
sometimes in the absence of increased visual acuity.
Contrast sensitivity can therefore be an essential
tool in monitoring therapies. Some progressive eye
conditions will result in changes in contrast
sensitivity, so that monitoring contrast sensitivity
alongside visual acuity (and other visual functions)
may be essential in determining progress of the
condition.
THE TARGETS
Like its ‘sister’ test, the Cardiff Acuity Test, the
Cardiff Contrast Test uses vanishing optotypes.
The targets are drawn with a light band bordered by
two darker bands, each of half the width of the light
band, all on a neutral gray background; thus the
average luminance of the target is equal to that of
the gray background. If the target lies beyond the
subject’s contrast limit, it merges with the gray
background, and simply becomes invisible.
The targets employed by the test are pictures, all of
the same overall size, but decreasing in contrast between the light and dark bands. The contrast
sensitivity is determined by the faintest bands for
which the target is visible.
The test covers 12 Contrast levels using three Cards
at each level (36 cards total) using the preferential
looking technique. These contrast levels start at
46% and decrease to to 1 % which equates to
Sensitivity levels from 2.17 to 100.
When the Cardiff Contrast Test is carried out at a
distance of 50 cm the targets represent 1.9 cycles
per degree (or 6/90, 20/300) and at a distance of 1
m the targets represent 3.8 cycles per degree (or
6/45, 20/150). At a distance of 25 cm the targets
represent 1.0 cycle per degree (or 6/180, 20/600).
Results from the test are presented in a manner that
is consistent with scoring of the Pelli-Robson
Contrast Test for adults.
Butterfly occluding glasses
are included with each
Cardiff Test Contrast
Sensitivity set.
| Card |
Picture |
Contrast (%) |
Contrast Sensitivity |
| A |
House |
46 |
2.17 |
| B |
Train |
32 |
3.13 |
| C |
Boat |
22 |
4.55 |
| D |
Duck |
16 |
6.25 |
| E |
Train |
12 |
8.33 |
| F |
Car |
8 |
12.5 |
| G |
Fish |
6 |
16.67 |
| H |
Boat |
4 |
25 |
| I |
Duck |
3 |
33.33 |
| J |
House |
2 |
50 |
| K |
Car |
1.5 |
66.66 |
| L |
Train |
1 |
100 |

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