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A visual field test (also known as perimetry) measures how far and how clearly you can see to the sides, above and below when you are looking straight ahead.
It is most commonly used to assess peripheral vision in each eye for conditions such as glaucoma. By testing many points around your central vision, the test builds a map of how sensitive your vision is across your field of view.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. Yet when it is detected early, further vision loss can often be prevented.
Visual field testing helps eye care clinicians:
Because glaucoma damage can be subtle at first, regular, high-quality visual field testing is an important part of protecting sight.
Eyeonic turns a standard computer or tablet into a sophisticated visual field testing device:
You are asked to cover one eye and keep your gaze on a central target.
Small light stimuli are shown at different points of your peripheral vision. Some are easier to see, others are dimmer – this helps determine the faintest spots you can detect.
The test usually focuses on the central 24 degrees of your vision, using dozens of test locations. From your responses, a map of your visual field is generated for each eye.
Your sensitivity at each point is compared with age-matched normal data. Areas that are reduced are flagged as potential visual field defects for your clinician to interpret.
Throughout the test, Eyeonic uses your device’s camera to monitor head position and gaze. If you move too far, too close, or away from the fixation target, the test pauses and on-screen and verbal instructions guide you back into the correct position before continuing.
Your report includes:
Summary scores, including the Visual Field Index (VFI), which gives an easy-to-understand percentage score of your overall visual field (100% is normal)
These details are designed for clinicians, but the key message is simple: the test provides a clear picture of how well your peripheral vision is functioning.
A normal visual field is reassuring, but it does not guarantee that the eyes are completely healthy. In early glaucoma, visual field tests may still appear normal, which is why they must be interpreted alongside a full eye examination and other tests.
An abnormal visual field does not automatically mean you have glaucoma. There are many possible causes, and sometimes a test result can be affected by tiredness, loss of concentration, or incorrect technique. Your eye care professional will review the results, repeat the test if needed, and explain what they mean for you.
Visual field testing is always complementary to clinical care, not a replacement for it.
Your eye care clinician will tailor a schedule for you, but as a guide:
Visual field testing is a subjective test. It relies on people pressing the button when they see a light. That naturally introduces some room for error.
Eyeonic helps manage this by tracking:
If these are too high, the report will note low test reliability. Otherwise, you and your clinician can be confident that the result is of high quality.
Eyeonic places cybersecurity and privacy at the heart of its platform:
Eyeonic is designed to extend, not replace, professional eye care.
Your tests are most useful when interpreted by an optometrist or ophthalmologist who knows your eyes, your risk factors, and your treatment plan.
Visual field testing from any computer or tablet is about making high-quality glaucoma monitoring more convenient and accessible while keeping clinical expertise at the centre of every decision.


















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