Abstract
Apparent minification of virtual images has been attributed to accommodation micropsia, that is, a reduction in the apparent size of viewed objects accompanying an inward accommodation of the eyes. Thirteen bilateral pseudophakes incapable of accommodation but with good residual vision were tested monocularly for apparent minification in the viewfinder of a single-lens reflex camera. Apparent minification of about the same order as that typically found with normals occurred with the pseudophakic observers, demonstrating that pseudophakes are subject to distortions in apparent size with virtual-imaging displays in the same way as normals, thus establishing that visual accommodation is not a necessary condition for the effect.
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