Relative Luminance Ratio

Author(s):  
Jennifer D. Kruschwitz
Keyword(s):  
1990 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 605-608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Avi Chaudhuri ◽  
Thomas D. Albright

AbstractCurrent approaches to the problem of equating different colors for luminance (chromatic isoluminance) rely upon human reports of perceptual events that are reduced at some luminance ratio. In this report, a technique is described that evokes a vivid percept of motion of a textured pattern only at isoluminance. Furthermore, in both humans and monkeys, the moving stimulus produces a striking optokinetic response in the same direction as the perceived motion. If used in this manner, the technique can provide an estimate of chromatic isoluminance in a variety of species and be used to corroborate a human subjects's perceptual judgement.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Turner ◽  
Daniel Feuerriegel ◽  
Milan Andrejevic ◽  
Robert Hester ◽  
Stefan Bode

To navigate the world safely, we often need to rapidly ‘change our mind’ about decisions. Current models assume that initial decisions and change-of-mind decisions draw upon common sources of sensory evidence. In two-choice scenarios, this evidence may be ‘relative’ or ‘absolute’. For example, when judging which of two objects is the brightest, the luminance difference and luminance ratio between the two objects are sources of ‘relative’ evidence, which are invariant across additive and multiplicative luminance changes. Conversely, the overall luminance of the two objects combined is a source of ‘absolute’ evidence, which necessarily varies across symmetric luminance manipulations. Previous studies have shown that initial decisions are sensitive to both relative and absolute evidence; however, it is unknown whether change-of-mind decisions are sensitive to absolute evidence. Here, we investigated this question across two experiments. In each experiment participants indicated which of two flickering greyscale squares was brightest. Following an initial decision, the stimuli remained on screen for a brief period and participants could change their response. To investigate the effect of absolute evidence, the overall luminance of the two squares was varied whilst either the luminance difference (Experiment 1) or luminance ratio (Experiment 2) was held constant. In both experiments we found that increases in absolute evidence led to faster, less accurate initial responses and slower changes of mind. Change-of-mind accuracy decreased when the luminance difference was held constant, but remained unchanged when the luminance ratio was fixed. The initial response effects could be explained by the presence of input-dependent noise within the decision process, varying either within or across trials. However, the change-of-mind effects could not be captured by existing models, nor by two modified models which included input-dependent noise sources. This suggests that that the continued integration of sensory evidence following an initial decision operates differently to that described in existing theoretical accounts.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (Supplement1) ◽  
pp. S180-S181
Author(s):  
Motonori ISHIBASHI ◽  
Yuuki INO ◽  
Kazuma TAKANO ◽  
Shoma YAMANAKA

2013 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-78
Author(s):  
Shinya Takarabe ◽  
Junji Morishita ◽  
Hidetake Yabuuchi ◽  
Hiroshi Akamine ◽  
Noriyuki Hashimoto ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 82 (8) ◽  
pp. 551-563
Author(s):  
Eiichiro Toriumi ◽  
Sosuke Morii ◽  
Miyosi Ayama ◽  
Takeshi Kumagai

Author(s):  
Gary S. Olacsi ◽  
Joy Kempic ◽  
Robert J. Beaton

This work evaluated the recently-published ISO 9241-7 “Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display terminals (VDTs) - Part 7: Requirements for display with reflections” technical standard in terms of perceived image quality judgments for CRT displays. The effects of five illumination conditions and two screen contrast polarities on image quality were assessed for seven CRT/anti-reflection filter configurations. Participants judged the image quality of the displays after reading text passages on the screen. Image quality judgments then were compared to ISO 9241-7 compliance classifications, as well as to two metrics inherent to the standard: screen image luminance ratio and specular reflection luminance ratio. The findings of this work (along with Kempic, Olacsi, and Beaton, 1998) contribute to a human factors justification of ISO 9241-7 and point up several shortcomings in this international standard. In particular, the findings indicate that specular reflections from CRTs degrade image quality more than do diffuse reflections, and, therefore, the importance of specular reflections is understated in the ISO 9241-7 standard.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geraldine Quek ◽  
Jan Wienold ◽  
Marilyne Andersen

Discomfort glare metrics typically consider at least one of the two effects of discomfort glare - saturation and contrast - in their equation. The former occurs when there is an excessively bright glare source in the field of view, while the latter occurs when there is a high luminance ratio between the glare source and the adaptation level of the eye. We hypothesize that the contrast effect may dominate in low-light scenarios such as those commonly found in open-plan offices. Thus, we designed and carried out a user study in controlled laboratory conditions with 63 participants with a total of 252 scenes to investigate discomfort glare evaluations in dim daylight office environments with low adaptation levels. Our preliminary findings support our hypothesis that contrast-driven metrics predict glare responses in a more reliable way than hybrid metrics at low adaptation levels where the contrast effect dominates, which underlines the need for refining glare metrics in low brightness conditions.


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