M
Michael D. Crossland
Researcher at Moorfields Eye Hospital
Publications - 70
Citations - 2502
Michael D. Crossland is an academic researcher from Moorfields Eye Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fixation (visual) & Macular degeneration. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 68 publications receiving 2166 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael D. Crossland include National Institute for Health Research & UCL Institute of Ophthalmology.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Preferred retinal locus development in patients with macular disease.
Michael D. Crossland,Michael D. Crossland,L.E. Culham,L.E. Culham,S.A. Kabanarou,Gary S. Rubin,Gary S. Rubin +6 more
TL;DR: Reading performance was better in patients who were not aware of using eccentric viewing strategies and who used a repeatable number of PRLs under all positions of gaze, which are relevant for counseling patients with MD and for the design of rehabilitation programs for patients with central vision loss.
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Fixation stability and reading speed in patients with newly developed macular disease.
TL;DR: This paper investigates the development of the PRL, with particular reference to the stability of fixation, in patients with macular disease and central scotomas.
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Large-scale remapping of visual cortex is absent in adult humans with macular degeneration
Heidi A. Baseler,Andre Gouws,Koen V. Haak,Chris Racey,Michael D. Crossland,Adnan Tufail,Gary S. Rubin,Frans W. Cornelissen,Antony B. Morland +8 more
TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging results provide no evidence of remapping, questioning the contemporary view that early visual areas of the adult human brain have the capacity to reorganize extensively.
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Transplantation of human embryonic stem cell-derived retinal pigment epithelial cells in macular degeneration
Manjit S Mehat,Venki Sundaram,Caterina Ripamonti,Anthony G. Robson,Alexander J. Smith,Shyamanga Borooah,Martha Robinson,Adam N. Rosenthal,William Innes,Richard G. Weleber,Richard W J Lee,Michael D. Crossland,Gary S. Rubin,Baljean Dhillon,David H. W. Steel,Eddy Anglade,Robert Lanza,Robin R. Ali,Michel Michaelides,James W B Bainbridge +19 more
TL;DR: Subretinal hyperpigmentation is consistent with the survival of viable transplanted hESC-derived RPE cells, but may reflect released pigment in their absence, and intervention in early stage of disease should be approached with caution.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical assessment of two new contrast sensitivity charts.
TL;DR: In a population of hospital ophthalmology patients, the coefficient of repeatability is better for the Mars chart and worse for the Test Chart 2000 when compared with the Pelli–Robson chart.