PURPOSE: To investigate the effect of flicker rate on measured visual field extent in toddlers.
METHODS: A total of 270 full-term children (90 each at 11-, 17-, and 30-months of age) and 36 adults were tested binocularly with an LED static perimetry procedure using a black double-arc perimeter. Each subject was tested with one of three flicker rates: 0, 3, or 10 Hz. The median farthest location seen and an interpolated estimate of the location at which 50% of the subjects detected the peripheral stimulus were calculated for each age group for each flicker rate.
RESULTS: For 11-, 17-, and 30-month-old subjects, but not adults, flickering stimuli produced a larger measured visual field extent than nonflickering stimuli. For the 10-Hz stimuli, measured visual field extent in children did not differ from that of adults.
CONCLUSIONS: In infants and young children, binocular measured visual field extent is enhanced by peripheral stimulus flicker. Maturity of the measured visual field depends on the stimulus parameters used during testing.