Optimization of Adaptive Lighting Technology Based on Varying-Frequency Sinusoidal Grating Projection

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 3536-3544
Author(s):  
Chengang Lyu ◽  
Ziqiang Huo ◽  
Alimina Alimasi ◽  
Hao Qi ◽  
Yuqing Chang ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Kai Zhang ◽  
Ningning Zhu ◽  
Mingming Zhang ◽  
Lei Wang ◽  
Jun Xing

Recently, the light-emitting diode (LED) has been considered as an energy-saving and environment-friendly lighting technology,which is ten times more energy efficient than conventional incandescent lights. As an emerging photoelectric material,...


Perception ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 1267-1286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce Schneider ◽  
Giampaolo Moraglia

In previous studies the authors have shown that the enhanced detectability exhibited by stereoscopically viewed targets can be accounted for by assuming that the binocular system can linearly summate the left-eye and right-eye views of a visual scene. A model based upon this assumption leads to a variety of predictions concerning the detectability of noise-embedded targets. One such prediction is that the detectability of a target in these conditions is highly orientation specific. A test is reported of such a prediction that can be regarded as counterintuitive: namely, that the detectability, under stereoscopic viewing conditions, of a patch of sinusoidal grating masked by Gaussian noise should change substantially when the grating, oriented at 45°, is rotated until its orientation becomes −45°. The implications of these results for an understanding of the phenomenon of camouflage breaking are discussed.


1979 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-11
Author(s):  
V. K. Maitreya

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 4-11
Author(s):  
Adam Rogers

The city of Los Angeles is converting its streetlights from orange-gold sodium vapor technology to cold, white light-emitting diodes. It’s a transition that will change the color of the city at night, in a place with a long history of experimentation with artificial lighting technology. That means not only that the city will appear different, but it will no longer correspond to memories of its coloration, or to its depictions in famous films.


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 513-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anand C. Joshi ◽  
Matthew J. Thurtell ◽  
Mark F. Walker ◽  
Alessandro Serra ◽  
R. John Leigh

The human ocular following response (OFR) is a preattentive, short-latency visual-field–holding mechanism, which is enhanced if the moving stimulus is applied in the wake of a saccade. Since most natural gaze shifts incorporate both saccadic and vergence components, we asked whether the OFR was also enhanced during vergence. Ten subjects viewed vertically moving sine-wave gratings on a video monitor at 45 cm that had a temporal frequency of 16.7 Hz, contrast of 32%, and spatial frequency of 0.17, 0.27, or 0.44 cycle/deg. In Fixation/OFR experiments, subjects fixed on a white central dot on the video monitor, which disappeared at the beginning of each trial, just as the sinusoidal grating started moving up or down. We measured the change in eye position in the 70- to 150-ms open-loop interval following stimulus onset. Group mean downward responses were larger (0.14°) and made at shorter latency (85 ms) than upward responses (0.10° and 96 ms). The direction of eye drifts during control trials, when gratings remained stationary, was unrelated to the prior response. During vergence/OFR experiments, subjects switched their fixation point between the white dot at 45 cm and a red spot at 15 cm, cued by the disappearance of one target and appearance of the other. When horizontal vergence velocity exceeded 15°/s, motion of sinusoidal gratings commenced and elicited the vertical OFR. Subjects showed significantly ( P < 0.001) larger OFR when the moving stimulus was presented during convergence (group mean increase of 46%) or divergence (group mean increase of 36%) compared with following fixation. Since gaze shifts between near and far are common during natural activities, we postulate that the increase of OFR during vergence movements reflects enhancement of early cortical motion processing, which serves to stabilize the visual field as the eyes approach their new fixation point.


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