Difference between revisions of Hyperopia

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'''Hyperopia''' is far-sightedness. [[Plus lenses]], yay.
'''Hyperopia''' is commonly called far-sightedness. It is corrected with [[Plus lenses]], yay.  Hyperopia is the opposite of [[myopia]], many of the EM techniques work for hyperopia, but your blur horizons and the signs on everything are backwards.  Remember that all the pages written about myopia are using negative numbers, and myopes need to practice distance AF, while hyperopes need to practice near AF.
 
A myope's prescription will be for the distant/far side of their visual range.  [[Normalized]]/distance lenses will be very close to the prescription, and [[Differentials]]/Close lenses will be for near vision.  A hyperope's prescription is for near side of their visual range, so the near lenses should be close to prescription, and the far lenses are the ones that need adjusting.
 
Keep your signs straight on your math!  You need more plus or less minus for close vision, less plus or more minus for distance vision.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 02:40, 11 June 2020

Hyperopia is commonly called far-sightedness. It is corrected with Plus lenses, yay. Hyperopia is the opposite of myopia, many of the EM techniques work for hyperopia, but your blur horizons and the signs on everything are backwards. Remember that all the pages written about myopia are using negative numbers, and myopes need to practice distance AF, while hyperopes need to practice near AF.

A myope's prescription will be for the distant/far side of their visual range. Normalized/distance lenses will be very close to the prescription, and Differentials/Close lenses will be for near vision. A hyperope's prescription is for near side of their visual range, so the near lenses should be close to prescription, and the far lenses are the ones that need adjusting.

Keep your signs straight on your math! You need more plus or less minus for close vision, less plus or more minus for distance vision.

References