What's the difference between monocular and uniocular?

Monocular


Definition:

  • (a.) Having only one eye; with one eye only; as, monocular vision.
  • (a.) Adapted to be used with only one eye at a time; as, a monocular microscope.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Errors in the initial direction of response were fewer in binocular viewing in comparison with monocular viewing.
  • (2) It appears that the effects of monocular lid suture upon MIN are in most respects similar to the effects of monocular lid suture previously reported for the A laminae.
  • (3) Fish were trained monocularly via the compressed or the normal visual field using an aversive classical conditioning model.
  • (4) The present report details an unusual patient with "occult temporal arteritis" who sustained abrupt monocular visual loss and subsequent ipsilateral ophthalmoplegia involving all functions of the oculomotor nerve.
  • (5) Results of tests on 4 mammalian, 19 reptilian, and 17 avian species confirmed the prediction that lack of optomotor response to monocular optokinetic stimulation in one of the two horizontal directions would correlate with afoveate retinal organization, whereas consistent optomotor responses to monocular stimulation in either horizontal direction would correlate with foveate organization.
  • (6) IBA was defined as the percentage increment of the largest binocular response compared with the monocular response.
  • (7) The reports of rod-dominated psychophysical spectral sensitivity from the deprived eye of monocularly lid-sutured (MD) monkeys are intriguing but difficult to reconcile with the absence of any reported deprivation effects in retina.
  • (8) After training, this abduction-adduction asymmetry was preserved in the light and dark with monocular or dichoptic viewing, indicating again that all adaptive changes were conjugate.
  • (9) Cataracts accounted for 22% of bilateral and 6% of monocular blindness.
  • (10) Two visually monocular patients with retinopathy of prematurity, followed up for 14 and 5 years, developed progressive visual loss in their twenties and thirties, respectively.
  • (11) Lateral peristriate differences were less than those of striate cortex, and regions of greater and lesser monocular input could be distinguished.
  • (12) All but two patients noted monocular diplopia; in three patients this was so intolerable that the diffractive lens was explanted and exchanged for a monofocal lens, following which the visual acuity improved by an average of two Snellen lines and complaints of monocular diplopia disappeared.
  • (13) in monkeys monocularly deprived from birth for up to 27 weeks, and compared them with results from the non-deprived layers in the same animals and in a series of normal animals.
  • (14) These differential responses to monocular deprivation suggest different time courses of development among the dLGN laminae.
  • (15) Monocular and binocular depth thresholds were measured for all kittens when they were between three and five months old.
  • (16) We may thus conclude that both the binocular and monocular contrast sensitivity seemed independent of age within the range of 6 to 40 years.
  • (17) In addition, our data indicate that, following neonatal monocular enucleation, developmental abnormalities in the topography of geniculocortical projections can occur independently of any alteration in the retinogeniculate projection patterns.
  • (18) In monocularly enucleated monkeys, patches are larger and darker above and below the ocular dominance stripes of the remaining eye than in the alternate stripes.
  • (19) A more sensitive within-animal comparison was carried out to detect any small shifts in metabolic activity which might have occurred during retinal blockade; after 1 or 2 months of monocular TTX treatment, either binocular enucleation or binocular TTX injections were performed 24 h before 2-DG, depriving both sides of the SC of retinal input.
  • (20) When a perspective drawing is viewed monocularly, changes in fixation point are accompanied by changes in steady-state vergence; their direction is usually appropriate for the distance relationships implied in the illustration.

Uniocular


Definition:

  • (a.) Of, pertaining to, or seated in, one eye; monocular.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The presence of subclinical ophthalmopathy in the fellow eye is a useful diagnostic aid in cases of uniocular proptosis.
  • (2) Uniocular eye closure in bright daylight has been considered as evidence of a binocular vision anomaly.
  • (3) A peak in the b-wave amplitude was observed in both eyes during uniocular irrigation with melatonin when compared with the amplitude measured during the initial perfusion with PHS (irrigated eye: +27%, p less than 0.001; control eye +18%, p less than 0.002).
  • (4) Thirteen cases demonstrated that optic nerve aplasia typically occurs uniocularly in an otherwise healthy person.
  • (5) Although there were no specific symptoms which could be correlated to an increased incidence of retinal breaks, those patients who complained of isolated uniocular floaters had an insignificant incidence of breakage, when compared to asymptomatic fellow eyes.
  • (6) A 74-year-old man with the isolated complaint of uniocular transient visual loss after exposure to bright light was found to have severe ipsilateral, atherosclerotic carotid occlusive disease.
  • (7) A 48-year-old man had uniocular neovascular glaucoma, with the only apparent predisposing factor being a primary epithelioid melanoma of the iris.
  • (8) Temporary uniocular loss of vision on eye movement may be an early sign of an intra-orbital mass.
  • (9) The findings led to the development of a scheme of uniocular connectivity to a matrix of depth units.
  • (10) In the experiments reported herein, studies were performed to determine if 8D2, a monoclonal antibody against a type-common epitope of glycoprotein D, could protect mice from retinal necrosis following uniocular anterior chamber inoculation of HSV-1.
  • (11) The uniocular visual field representations on the superior colliculus (SC), as estimated from multiunit response field centres about the horizontal meridian, were compared in midpontine pretrigeminal opossums (Didelphis marsupialis aurita Wied 1826).
  • (12) Uniocular posterior polar lesions thought to be characteristic of suspected adult ocular toxocariasis have been observed in a group of eight patients whose ages ranged from 20 to 50 years.
  • (13) The dissociated, pendular nystagmus consists of high-frequency oscillations that may be disconjugate, conjugate, or purely uniocular.
  • (14) Contact lenses remain the initial treatment of choice in infancy, but modern intraocular lenses are well tolerated and have a role in the visual rehabilitation of patients with contact lens and probable contact lens failures and older children with uniocular cataracts.
  • (15) Uniocular nystagmus was studied by electro-oculography in ten patients with monocular visual loss caused by ocular and optic nerve lesions.
  • (16) Two patients presented with unusual uniocular electroretinographic (ERG) phenomena.
  • (17) We examined a child with a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection who at 15 months of age developed acute encephalitis, followed 1 week later by a diffuse, uniocular retinochoroiditis.
  • (18) I describe five patients with occludable anterior chamber angles and bilateral corneal guttata who developed uniocular progressive corneal edema with visual loss following argon laser iridotomy.
  • (19) Based on the distinction between uniocular vertical magnification and vertical disparity, the induced size effect experiments were reinterpreted and new experiments done to show that vertical disparity signals can produce other stereoptic depth effects.
  • (20) Monocular and binocular contrast sensitivities were measured in patients with uniocular cataract.

Words possibly related to "monocular"

Words possibly related to "uniocular"