Helping people see
The vision science graduate program at the University of Waterloo's School of Optometry and Vision Science specializes in the following four areas:
Faculty research interests
Students will work with one or more faculty supervisors in their chosen area(s).
"¶" indicates an Approved Doctoral Dissertation Advisor (ADDS)
Please feel free to contact faculty directly for more information about their research, or the equipment available in their lab. Note that faculty do not accept a student until a formal application has been made.
Christian, Lisa, BSc (Queen's), OD (Illinois), FCOVD, FAAO
Associate Clinical Professor; Associate Director, Clinical Education
- Healthcare education and communication
- Interprofessional education and collaboration
- Amblyopia
- Binocular Vision
- Pediatric vision care
¶ Choh, Vivian, BSc (Toronto), MSc (Toronto), PhD (Waterloo)
Associate Professor; Associate Director, Research
- The optics, molecular structure and function of the crystalline lens during accommodation
- Molecular and cellular changes mediating and following refractive error development and retinal ganglion cell death
- Development of neuroprotective strategies following retinal ganglion cell death
¶ Dalton, Kristine, OD (Waterloo), MSc (Waterloo), PhD (Aston University), MCOptom, FAAO, FBCLA
Associate Professor
- Clinical aspects of optometric practice, particularly those related to athletic performance and traumatic brain injury, including refractive error correction, binocular vision, vision therapy, performance-enhancement vision training, and multidisciplinary management of patient care.
- Understanding the role of functional aspects of vision performance in relation to sports performance, traumatic brain injury rehabilitation, and Paralympic classification for athletes with vision impairment.
Furtado, Nadine, BSc (McGill), MSc (SUNY), OD (SUNY), FAAO
Associate Clinical Professor; Head, Ocular Disease & Imaging Service
- Public Health - access to care and healthcare system efficiency
- Telehealth - remote delivery of healthcare locally and globally
- Health Informatics – use of AI and machine learning to optimize the diagnosis and management of ocular disease
- Ocular Disease & Ophthalmic Imaging
- Interprofessional Education and Collaboration
¶ Hileeto, Denise, MD (Bulgaria), MSc (Western)
Clinical Associate Professor, Admissions Officer
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Histopathologic evaluation and establishing of morphologic tissue characteristics in normal and pathological states of the eye and ocular adnexal tissue.
Identification of new diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers in ocular surface disease, myopia, and altered refractive states.
Histopathologic evaluation of limbal stem cell deficiency and investigating the possibilities for ocular surface reconstruction through tissue substitutes.
Evaluation of histological parameters and correlation of microscopically identified tissue characteristics with their imaging correlates using current diagnostic imaging techniques.
New methodologies for digital analysis in diagnostic and prognostic histopathology using digitalized histology slides.
¶ Hudson, Christopher, BSc (Hons), PhD (Aston University), MCOptom, PgCUT (University of Ulster), FAAO
Professor
- The development of non-invasive psychophysical and objective techniques to improve the clinical monitoring of retinal and systemic disease and the evaluation of new techniques in a clinical setting
- The relationship between early visual function loss and morphological retinal disturbance
- Diabetic retinopathy, macular edema, age-related macular degeneration, primary open-angle glaucoma
- Neurodegenerative disease and the eye; Alzheimer’s disease/mild cognitive impairment, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, cerebrovascular disease, fonto-temporal degeneration, Parkinson’s disease.
- Clinical psychophysics; automated perimetry, colour vision, short-wavelength pathway sensitivity, frequency-of-seeing, signal detection theory, cognitive function
- Ocular imaging techniques; scanning laser, tomography, laser Doppler, retinal oximetry, retinal oxygen delivery, angiography, spectral domain optical coherence tomography, retinal morphology, retinal sub-layer segmentation
- Ocular/retinal hemodynamics; blood flow, vascular reactivity, ocular perfusion pressure, blood gas perturbation, autoregulation
¶ Hunter, Jennifer, PhD (Waterloo)
Associate Professor
- Adaptive Optics
- Mechanisms of light-induced retinal damage
- Non-invasive fluorescence imaging techniques to study retinal function in healthy and diseased eyes
¶ Hutchings, Natalie, BSc (Hons), MCOptom, PhD (Aston University)
Associate Professor
- Retinal imaging, psychophysical assessment of visual function
- Statistical methods for clinical interpretation of psychophysical data, visual fields, continuing optometric education.
¶ Irving, Elizabeth L., OD, MSc, PhD (all Waterloo)
Professor
- Oculomotor development and binocular vision
- Refractive development
- Animal models of myopia
- New methods of visual assessment
- Patient eye care knowledge and education
- Environmental adaptation of the eye and visual system
- Spaceflight associated neuro-ocular syndrome
- Vision and gaze-behaviour in aviation
Jones, Deborah, BSc, FCOptom, FAAO
Clinical Professor
- Myopia control
- Pediatric vision
- Eye care in Indigenous communities
- Healthcare education and communication
¶ Jones, Lyndon W., BSc (Hons) (Wales), PhD (Aston University), DSc (Aston University), FCOptom (Wales), DipCLP, DipOrth, FAAO, FIACLE, FBCLA
Professor (Optometry, Biology, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Physics)
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Contact lens material development and testing
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Dry eye
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Impact of material composition on tear film deposition
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Impact of care systems on ocular comfort and in vivo wettability
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Myopia control
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Ocular drug delivery
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Ocular response to daily and extended wear of contact lenses
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Role of the tear film in contact lens wear
¶ Kelly, Krista, BA (University of New Brunswick), MA (York University), PhD (York University)
Assistant Professor
- Effects of atypical visual experience on the developing brain
- Ocular motor dysfunction in amblyopia and strabismus
- Functional consequences of common pediatric eye conditions (amblyopia, strabismus, anisometropia, cataract) on reading and motor skills
¶ Lakshminarayanan, Vasudevan,
Professor (Optometry, Physics, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Systems Design Engineering)
- Classical optics – aberration theory, optical systems, optical fibres, ophthalmic and visual optics, etc.
- image processing algorithms
- AI/deep learning/machine learning for ophthalmic disease diagnosis
- Visual perception - psychophysics, models
- Quantum information and computing
- Mathematical methods in optical science and engineering
- History of Optics
- Science policy
¶ Murphy, Paul, BSc (Hons) (Cardiff), MBA (South Wales), PhD (Glasgow Caledonian), FCOptom, FAAO, FBCLA, FEAOO,
Professor
- Anterior ocular surface including contact lens wear, tear film physiology, ocular surface temperature, corneal epithelium and corneal sensation
- Instrumentation; development of new clinical and research instruments including evaporimeter, corneal aesthesiometer, ocular surface thermography
- Bibliometrics; use of bibliometrics in research comparisons
- Workforce studies including attitude of optometry students to studying optometry, and expectations/aspirations for future career
¶ Ngo, William, OD (Waterloo), PhD (Waterloo)
Assistant Professor
- Human clinical testing related to the diagnosis and treatment of dry eye disease and meibomian gland dysfunction.
- Cellular physiology and their response to stress and damage.
- Discovery of drugs and biologics for modulating inflammation.
¶ Thompson, Benjamin, BSc (Sussex), PhD (Sussex)
Professor
- Human visual cortex development and plasticity
- Amblyopia
- Binocular vision
- Functional MRI
- Non-invasive brain stimulation
- Ocular imaging and visual rehabilitation
In addition to this page, several of the faculty and research groups have their own websites: Research and lab groups.