Certified Paraoptometric (CPO) Practice Exam 2025

Disable ads (and more) with a membership for a one time $2.99 payment

Prepare for the Certified Paraoptometric Exam with our comprehensive quiz featuring multiple-choice questions. Each question is accompanied by hints and explanations, helping you build your knowledge and confidence. Get ready to excel in your career!

Each practice test/flash card set has 50 randomly selected questions from a bank of over 500. You'll get a new set of questions each time!

Practice this question and more.


What is it called when the eye focuses images theoretically behind it, causing blurry vision?

  1. Myopia

  2. Emmetropia

  3. Hyperopia

  4. Presbyopia

The correct answer is: Hyperopia

The condition described, where the eye focuses images behind the retina, resulting in blurry vision, is known as hyperopia. In hyperopia, light rays are focused behind the retina when the eye is at rest, making distant objects appear clearer than close ones. This occurs because the eyeball is too short or the cornea has too little curvature, which causes a mismatch between the eye's physical dimensions and its refractive power. In contrast, myopia is when images are focused in front of the retina, causing difficulty seeing distant objects clearly. Emmetropia refers to a normal state of vision where light focuses correctly on the retina, and presbyopia is an age-related condition that affects the ability to focus on close objects due to decreased elasticity of the lens, not the focusing behind the retina. Thus, the correct term for focusing images behind the eye is hyperopia.