Monovision Contact Lens Information
- The brain is constantly receiving separate and unique images from each eye. Think of the eyes as two video cameras independently feeding images to a central production studio.
- Just as we are right or left handed, we are also right or left eyed. The dominant eye passes the image to the brain 14 to 21 milliseconds faster and thereby becomes the main point of reference for our vision.
- The dominant eye will do the majority of the work, so the doctors fits it with a contact lens to correct distance vision. The non dominant eye, which normally would have only provided depth perception, is now fit with a contact lens for near (reading) vision.
- The brain is now receiving two very different images. One is clear at distance and blurry up close while the other is clear up close and blurry at distance. The brain, like a television director, seamlessly switches to whichever "camera" suits it's present need.
- While monovision represents a good compromise between distance and near vision, it typically does not deliver "best possible" clarity at either distance. There is also a drop-off in depth perception and peripheral vision.