Evaluation of 3D tablet-based stereoacuity test ASTEROID in children with normal and abnormal visual acuity

J AAPOS. 2024 Jun;28(3):103930. doi: 10.1016/j.jaapos.2024.103930. Epub 2024 May 7.

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the utility of 3D, tablet-based, glasses-free Accurate STEReotest (ASTEROID) in children compared with the Titmus test.

Methods: Children aged 5-13 years were enrolled in a single-center, nonrandomized, observational comparison study and analyzed by age (5-7 vs 8-13 years) and visual acuity (20/25 or better in both eyes vs abnormal). Each participant underwent both the ASTEROID and Titmus stereoacuity tests. Stereoacuity was defined as fine (≤60 arcsec), moderate (61-200 arcsec), coarse (201-1199 arcsec), or very coarse to nil (≥1200 arcsec). Agreement between the tests was assessed using a weighted kappa (κ) statistic based on all four categories.

Results: A total of 112 children were included: 28 aged 5-7 with normal visual acuity, 30 aged 5-7 with abnormal visual acuity, 34 aged 8-13 with normal visual acuity, and 20 aged 8-13 with abnormal visual acuity. Mean ASTEROID score was 688 ± 533 arcsec (range, 13-1200 arcsec). Agreement between ASTEROID and Titmus test scores for participants overall was moderate (κ = 0.52). By subgroup, agreement was fair for children 5-7 with abnormal visual acuity (κ = 0.31), moderate for children 5-7 with normal visual acuity (κ = 0.47) and children 8-13 with normal visual acuity (κ = 0.42), and substantial for children 8-13 with abnormal visual acuity (κ = 0.76). Where ASTEROID and Titmus score group varied, ASTEROID score was poorer in 94% (47/50) of cases.

Conclusions: ASTEROID is a digital, tablet-based test that evaluates global stereopsis, does not require glasses, and provides a continuum of scores. Among children, ASTEROID has good agreement with the Titmus test; however, it may be more sensitive at detecting stereovision deficits. Further study is necessary to determine which test is more accurate.

Publication types

  • Observational Study
  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Computers, Handheld*
  • Depth Perception* / physiology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional
  • Male
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Vision Disorders / diagnosis
  • Vision Disorders / physiopathology
  • Vision Tests* / methods
  • Visual Acuity* / physiology