Abstract:Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) can visualize vasculature structures, but provides limited information about the blood flow speeds. Here, we present a second generation variable interscan time analysis (VISTA) OCTA, which evaluates a quantitative surrogate marker for blood flow speed in vasculature. At the capillary level, spatially compiled OCTA and a simple temporal autocorrelation model, {\rho}({\tau}) = exp(-{\alpha}{\tau}), were used to evaluate a temporal autocorrelation decay constant, {\alpha}, as the blood flow speed marker. A 600 kHz A-scan rate swept-source provides short interscan time OCTA and fine A-scan spacing acquisition, while maintaining multi mm2 field of views for human retinal imaging. We demonstrate the cardiac pulsatility and repeatability of {\alpha} measured with VISTA. We show different {\alpha} for different retinal capillary plexuses in healthy eyes and present representative VISTA OCTA of eyes with diabetic retinopathy.