In 1923, Soviet ophthalmologists Sergei Golovin and D. A. Sivtsev developed the table for testing visual acuity,[1] that was used in the USSR and as of 2008[update] is still used in some post-Soviet states. This table is called Golovin-Sivtsev Table (Russian: Таблица Головина-Сивцева).[2]
It consists of two parts, 12 rows each, at the left of each row the distance D (in meters) from which person with visual acuity value 1.0 can read the row is indicated. At the right the value V shows minimum visual acuity value that person should have to be able to read the row from 5 meters distance. Rows visual acuity values represent the 0.1–2.0 range.[3]
The left part contained Cyrillic letters Ш, Б, М, Н, К, Ы, И in a definite order, with width of each character equal to its height, and the size of a first row character being 70 mm, in the second row it was 35 mm, and 7 mm in the last row. Right part of the table contained Landolt C symbols.