All Stories

  1. Colour blindness and driving
  2. Plates for color vision testing by Joern Kuchenbecker, Dieter Broschmann Stuttgart, New York; Georg Thieme Verlag, 2014 Hardcover, 16 pages of text and 32 colour vision testing plates. RRP $110.00
  3. Re: Is screening for congenital colour vision deficiency in school students worthwhile?
  4. Amblyopia and the H Barry Collin Research Medal
  5. Toward the vision splendid: The story of optometry in Tasmania and beyond by Keith Mackriell Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. Optometrists Association Australia (Tasmanian Division): 2013 110 pages. RRP Hardcover $120 Paperback $44
  6. Measuring visual acuity is not as simple as it seems
  7. Australian optometric research and the H Barry Collin Research Medal
  8. Professor Donald E Mitchell The H Barry Collin Research Medallist 2012 Foundation Director of the National Vision Research Institute of Australia
  9. New zest for public health optometry
  10. H Barry Collin Research Medal awarded to Professor Anthony J Adams
  11. What can optometrists do to prevent eye injuries?
  12. Professor Brian Brown PhD MAppSc BSc LOSc
  13. H Barry Collin Research Medal awarded to Professor Emeritus Jack D Pettigrew FRS
  14. Is history bunk?
  15. Low-vision care: we are doing better but not well enough
  16. The 13th Biennial Scientific Meeting in Optometry and the 7th Optometric Educators Meeting go online
  17. H Barry Collin Research Medal awarded to Gerald Westheimer FRS
  18. The problem of school vision screening: is the Orinda Study dead?
  19. Advice for medical students and practitioners with colour vision deficiency: a website resource
  20. Bertram Nathan FIO FSMC
  21. Colour blindness does not preclude fame as an artist: celebrated Australian artist Clifton Pugh was a protanope
  22. Caution: coloured medication and the colour blind
  23. Ninety years of history at a click of a mouse: back issues ofClinical and Experimental Optometryon-line
  24. THE EYE AND VISUAL CAPACITY
  25. THE HANDICAP OF ABNORMAL COLOUR VISION
  26. Color Vision Testing by Farnsworth Lantern and Ability to Identify Approach-Path Signal Colors
  27. Color Vision Assessment by Farnsworth Lantern: Results Using Alternative Pass-Fail Criteria
  28. Gerard William Crock AO KStJ 1929–2007 Inaugural Ringland Anderson Professor of Ophthalmology in The University of Melbourne
  29. Abnormal colour vision is a handicap to playing cricket but not an insurmountable one
  30. Emeritus Professor Josef Lederer 1921?2007
  31. Using clinical tests of colour vision to predict the ability of colour vision deficient patients to name surface colours
  32. Jan Lovie-Kitchin.
  33. Assessment of inherited colour vision defects in clinical practice
  34. Stephen John Dain.
  35. Categorical Color Naming of Surface Color Codes by People With Abnormal Color Vision
  36. Peter S Dwyer.
  37. Norman Brian Sims AM.
  38. Search for coloured objects in natural surroundings by people with abnormal colour vision
  39. Nothing is simple in colour vision and genetics
  40. The new Richmond HRR pseudoisochromatic test for colour vision is better than the Ishihara test
  41. Nathan Efron: Charismatic academic returns to Australia
  42. One of Australia's greatest cricketers was a protanope: a genetic detective story solved with the help of Schmidt's sign
  43. When is artificial light hazardous?
  44. Diagnosing protan heterozygosity using the Medmont C-100 colour vision test
  45. Communication:Five cricketers with abnormal colour vision
  46. David A Atchison
  47. Anthony J Gibson OAM: Clinical teacher
  48. The handicap of abnormal colour vision
  49. Visual search and the conspicuity of coloured targets for colour vision normal and colour vision deficient observers
  50. Graham O Hill
  51. Does the Farnsworth D15 test predict the ability to name colours?
  52. Do video display units cause visual problems?-a bedside story about the processes of public health decision-making
  53. Assuring quality in optometric practice
  54. Leon F Garner
  55. Should sunglasses be required to comply with the sunglass standard?
  56. David Michael Cockburn OAM
  57. Color and Defective Color Vision as Factors in the Conspicuity of Signs and Signals
  58. Protans and driving safety
  59. An artist with extreme deuteranomaly
  60. Protan colour vision deficiency and road accidents
  61. Who's responsible for safe vision on the roads?
  62. Robert Augusteyn: Director of the National Vision Research Institute of Australia 1991 to 2001
  63. National or global?
  64. Perspectives on migraine: prevalence and visual symptoms
  65. H Barry Collin AM
  66. Did the CIE get it right? A critical test of the CIE color domains for signal lights
  67. William George Kett
  68. The Prevalence and Symptoms of Migraine in a Consecutive Series of Patients Attending an Optometric Practice
  69. Helen Gail Robbins: National President Optometrists Association Australia
  70. Eighty-three-or is it 87?-and still going strong
  71. Joyce Schultz
  72. Twenty-five years of progress: reflections of the NVRI directors 1973 to 1998
  73. Optometry, public health and diabetes
  74. Can clinical colour vision tests be used to predict the results of the Farnsworth lantern test?
  75. Author??s Response
  76. Effect of VDUs on the Eyes: Report of a 6-Year Epidemiological Study
  77. Protans and PAPI: Recognition of a two colour code by persons with defective colour vision
  78. Does defective colour vision really matter?
  79. The ability of colour defective observers to recognise an optimised set of red, green and white signal lights
  80. What Do Color Vision Defectives Say About Everyday Tasks?
  81. Incidence of Congenital Colour Vision Defects in an Australian Optometric Population
  82. The Effect of Object Size on the Performance of Colour Ordering and Discrimination Tasks
  83. Are colour vision standards justified for the transport industry?
  84. Reliability and Validity of Simple Photographic Plate Tests of Contrast Sensitivity
  85. ORIGINS OF COLOUR VISION STANDARDS WITHIN THE TRANSPORT INDUSTRY
  86. Can the conspicuity of objects be predicted from laboratory experiments?
  87. A Survey and Evaluation of Lantern Tests of Color Vision
  88. Guest Editorials: ON RESEARCH AND MOTHERHOOD
  89. PRIMARY GLAUCOMA - CRITERIA FOR REFERRAL
  90. Optimum Intensity of Red Road-Traffic Signal Lights for Normal and Protanopic Observers*
  91. Recognition of Colored Road Traffic Light Signals by Normal and Color-Vision-Defective Observers*