1 / 18

Visual Sensory Systems

Visual Sensory Systems. Chapter 4. The Stimulus: Light. Visual stimulation is a wave of electromagnetic energy Visual spectrum has a point along a wavelength Wavelength determines hue (color) – 400 -700 nm Amplitude determines brightness Pure colored wavelengths are said to be saturated

teresa
Download Presentation

Visual Sensory Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Visual Sensory Systems Chapter 4

  2. The Stimulus: Light • Visual stimulation is a wave of electromagnetic energy • Visual spectrum has a point along a wavelength • Wavelength determines hue (color) – 400 -700 nm • Amplitude determines brightness • Pure colored wavelengths are said to be saturated • May be diluted with achromatic light (gray) • e.g., pure red diluted with achromatic light yields pink • Measurement of brightness or intensity of stimulus reaching the eyeball is more complex • Luminous intensity/flux 1 candela or 12.57 lumens • Iluminance Foot candle or 10.76 LUX • Luminance Candela/M2 or foot lambert • Reflectance luminance/iluminance • Brightness Actual experience of intensity

  3. Illustration of Relationships

  4. Receptor System: Eyeball & Optic Nerve

  5. Visual Receptor System • Location – Retina center Fovea (cones) & Periphery (mostly rods) • Acuity (ability to resolve fine detail) – much greater when image on cones • Sensitivity (ability to detect light) – rods much more sensitive • Scotopic vision – night vision where only rods active • Photopic vision – enough light for both rods & cones • Color sensitivity – only cones can discriminate all wavelengths • Adaptation – Light stimulation causes rods to rapidly lose sensitivity (slow response); cones insensitive to changes (sometimes hypersensitive with little stimulation causes night glare) • Differential wavelength sensitivity – cones sensitive to all wavelengths; rods are particularly insensitive to long wavelengths (red)

  6. Sensory Processing Limitations • Contrast sensitivity – ability to detect contrast is essential to detect and recognize shapes • C = (L-D)/(L+D) CS = 1/CM • Contrast itself • Level of illumination

  7. Sensory Processing Limitations (cont.) • Reading Print – optimum print size >= 3 cycles/degree (stroke width 1/6 th degree); use familiar fonts; don’t use all uppercase or blocked letters • Color Sensation – best in well illuminated environment; 7% of males colorblind (protanopia). Most prevalent red-green • Simultaneous contrast – when two colors next to each other look the same • Negative After Image – occurs when focusing on one color too long. • Night Vision – • loss of contrast sensitivity due to age and low illumination is big problem • at night rods are actively used – lack of perception leads to speeding or overdriving head lights

  8. Bottom-up VS Top-down Prcessing • Bottom-up – stimulus that is there; Top – down – what we expect to be there.

  9. Depth Perception Pictorial Cues • Linear perspective – converging parallel lines • Relative size – objects known to be similar size appear be different size • Interposition – one object obscures contour of another • Light & shading – shadows provide evidence as to location • Textured gradients – distant objects have finer gradient • Relative motion or motion parallax – distant object appear to move slower across the visual field

  10. Visual Search & Detection • Eye movements • Pursuit (following a moving object – plane in the sky) • Saccadic • Characteristics – initiation latency, destination, movement time, dwell duration, & useful field of view • Visual search • Serial search model – discriminating target from non-target (distracters) images, T=(NI)/2, top-down • Conspicuity – how well target stands out, bottom-up • Expectancies – experience/knowledge lead to target

  11. Implications of Visual Search Knowledge • Knowledge of conspicuity should lead designer to enhance visibility of target • Knowledge of serial aspects should forewarn the designer about the cost of cluttered displays • Knowledge of the role of top-down processing should lead the designer to structure the search field to take advantage of past experience & intuition • Knowledge of all these influences should lead to visual search models that can predict how long it will take to find particular targets

  12. Signal Detection Theory • SDT assumes world can be modeled with the signal being present or absent (e.g., to luggage inspector weapon is signal and hair blowers, calculators, etc. are noise) • Combination of 2 states of the world present 4 joint events – hits, false alarms, misses, and correct rejections

  13. Sensitivity & Response Bias

  14. Interventions & Vigilance

  15. Difficulties in Mid-Air Detection • Other aircraft inconspicuous – occupies very small visual angle in field of vision • Two aircraft flying toward each other cover 1 mile in as little as 5 seconds • Two aircraft flying toward each other do not appear to be moving in the field of vision • Target may be camouflaged by clouds and ground noise • Not expecting other aircraft affects sensitivity because of top-down processing

  16. Discrimination • Ability to discriminate one signal from another • Recognize that long wave length colors are not easily recognized at night • Recognize that some letters and numbers are similar to others – 0 & O, E & F, 1 & l, etc. • Recognize that placement and design of signs & symbols can be confusing • Recognize that too close proximity can cause confusion • Design accordingly

  17. Absolute Judgement

More Related