Low-contrast Acuity Under Strong Luminance Dynamics and Potential Benefits of Divisive Display Augmented Reality

Author(s):  
Chou P. Hung ◽  
Chloe Callahan-Flintoft ◽  
Paul D. Fedele ◽  
Kim F. Fluitt ◽  
Barry D. Vaughan ◽  
...  

Understanding and predicting outdoor visual performance in augmented reality (AR) requires characterizing and modeling vision under strong luminance dynamics, including luminance differences of 10000-to-1 in a single image (high dynamic range, HDR). Classic models of vision, based on displays with 100-to-1 luminance contrast, have limited ability to generalize to HDR environments. An important question is whether low-contrast visibility, potentially useful for titrating saliency for AR applications, is resilient to saccade-induced strong luminance dynamics. The authors developed an HDR display system with up to 100,000-to-1 contrast and assessed how strong luminance dynamics affect low-contrast visual acuity. They show that, immediately following flashes of 25× or 100× luminance, visual acuity is unaffected at 90% letter Weber contrast and only minimally affected at lower letter contrasts (up to +0.20 LogMAR for 10% contrast). The resilience of low-contrast acuity across luminance changes opens up research on divisive display AR (ddAR) to effectively titrate salience under naturalistic HDR luminance.

Author(s):  
Chou P. Hung ◽  
Chloe Callahan-Flintoft ◽  
Paul D. Fedele ◽  
Kim F. Fluitt ◽  
Barry D. Vaughan ◽  
...  

Understanding and predicting outdoor visual performance in augmented reality (AR) requires characterizing and modeling vision under strong luminance dynamics, including luminance differences of 10000-to-1 in a single image (high dynamic range, HDR). Classic models of vision, based on displays with 100-to-1 luminance contrast, have limited ability to generalize to HDR environments. An important question is whether low-contrast visibility, potentially useful for titrating saliency for AR applications, is resilient to saccade-induced strong luminance dynamics. The authors developed an HDR display system with up to 100,000-to-1 contrast and assessed how strong luminance dynamics affect low-contrast visual acuity. They show that, immediately following flashes of 25× or 100× luminance, visual acuity is unaffected at 90% letter Weber contrast and only minimally affected at lower letter contrasts (up to +0.20 LogMAR for 10% contrast). The resilience of low-contrast acuity across luminance changes opens up research on divisive display AR (ddAR) to effectively titrate salience under naturalistic HDR luminance.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chou P Hung ◽  
Chloe Callahan-Flintoft ◽  
Paul D Fedele ◽  
Kim F Fluitt ◽  
Onyekachi Odoemene ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTLuminance can vary widely when scanning across a scene, by up to 10^9 to 1, requiring multiple normalizing mechanisms spanning from the retina to cortex to support visual acuity and recognition. Vision models based on standard dynamic range luminance contrast ratios below 100 to 1 have limited ability to generalize to real-world scenes with contrast ratios over 10,000 to 1 (high dynamic range [HDR]). Understanding and modeling brain mechanisms of HDR luminance normalization is thus important for military applications, including automatic target recognition, display tone mapping, and camouflage. Yet, computer display of HDR stimuli was until recently unavailable or impractical for research. Here we describe procedures for setup, calibration, and precision check of an HDR display system with over 100,000 to 1 luminance dynamic range (650–0.0065 cd/m^2), pseudo 11-bit grayscale precision, and 3-ms temporal precision in the MATLAB/Psychtoolbox software environment. The setup is synchronized with electroencephalography and IR eye-tracking measurements. We report measures of HDR visual acuity and the discovery of a novel phenomenon—that abrupt darkening (from 400 to 4 cd/m^2) engages contextual facilitation, distorting the perceived orientation of a high-contrast central target. Surprisingly, the facilitation effect depended on luminance similarity, contradicting both classic divisive and subtractive models of contextual normalization.


IEEE Access ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 177427-177437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jae Woong Soh ◽  
Jae Sung Park ◽  
Nam Ik Cho

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (7) ◽  
pp. 226-1-226-7
Author(s):  
Nabeel. A. Riza ◽  
Mohsin. A. Mazhar

Experimentally demonstrated for the first time is Coded Access Optical Sensor (CAOS) camera empowered robust and true white light High Dynamic Range (HDR) scene low contrast target image recovery over the full linear dynamic range. The 90 dB linear HDR scene uses a 16 element custom designed test target with low contrast 6 dB step scaled irradiances. Such camera performance is highly sought after in catastrophic failure avoidance mission critical HDR scenarios with embedded low contrast targets.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. A271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allie C. Hexley ◽  
Ali Özgür Yöntem ◽  
Manuel Spitschan ◽  
Hannah E. Smithson ◽  
Rafal Mantiuk

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