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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26565262

ABSTRACT

The present work is devoted to the study of the thermo-optical and nonlinear optical properties of smectic samples containing gold nanoparticles with different shapes. By using the time-resolved Z-scan technique, we determine the effects of nanoparticle addition on the critical behavior of the thermal diffusivity and thermo-optical coefficient at the vicinity of the smectic-A-nematic phase transition. Our results reveal that introduction of gold nanoparticles affects the temperature dependence of thermo-optical parameters, due to the local distortions in the orientational order and heat generation provided by guest particles during the laser exposure. Further, we show that a nonlinear optical response may take place at temperatures where the smectic order is well established. We provide a detailed discussion of the effects associated with the introduction gold nanoparticles on the mechanisms behind the thermal transport and optical nonlinearity in liquid-crystal samples.


Subject(s)
Gold/chemistry , Liquid Crystals/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Nonlinear Dynamics , Optical Phenomena , Temperature , Phase Transition
2.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt ; 30(5): 618-25, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20883346

ABSTRACT

The goal of this work was to evaluate the colour rendering of indoor lighting with CIE illuminants and white LEDs by estimating the chromatic diversity produced for normal and colour deficient observers. Reflectance spectra of a collection of scenes made of objects typically found indoors were obtained with hyperspectral imaging. Chromatic diversity was computed for 55 CIE illuminants and five LED light sources by estimating the number of different colours perceived in the scenes analysed. A considerable variation in chromatic diversity was found across illuminants, with the best producing about 50% more colours than the worst. For normal observers, the best illuminant was CIE FL3.8 which produced about 8% more colours than CIE illuminant A and D(65); for colour deficient observers, the best illuminants varied with the type of deficiency. When the number of colours produced with a specific illuminant was compared against its colour rendering index (CRI) and gamut area index (GAI), weak correlations were obtained. Together, these results suggest that normal and colour deficient observers may benefit from a careful choice of the illuminant, and this choice may not necessarily be based only on the CRI or GAI.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Color Vision Defects/psychology , Lighting/instrumentation , Color Perception Tests/methods , Humans , Psychometrics , Psychophysics
3.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt ; 30(5): 632-7, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20883348

ABSTRACT

The visual impression of an artistic painting is influenced both by the colour and by the specific spectral structure of the rendering light source. The relationship between illuminant spectral structure and visual appearance assumes particular relevance with the advent of light sources with almost arbitrary spectral distribution, like modern LED based lighting. The aim of this work was to study, computationally, chromatic effects on paintings of illuminants with the same colour as D65 but different spectral profile. Hyperspectral data from twenty oil paintings were used in the analysis. A large collection of metamers of D65 was generated and the radiance reflected from each pixel of the paintings was estimated for each of the metamers. The number of discernible colours produced for each painting and illuminant was computed, and correlated with the spectral structure of the metamers. It was found that the number of colours generated varied considerably across the collection of metamers and that the metamers producing more colours were spectrally more structured, that is, less uniform. This result suggests that it may be beneficial to explore appropriate spectral tuning in practical illumination.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Lighting/methods , Paintings , Colorimetry/methods , Humans , Psychophysics
4.
Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo ; 43(5): 263-6, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11696848

ABSTRACT

Over the last 30 years, a number of Vibrio species found in the aquatic environment have been indicated as cause of disease in human beings. Vibrio vulnificus is an emergent pathogen, an invasive and lethal marine bacterium related to wound infection and held accountable for gastroenteritis and primary septicemia. It occurs quite frequently in marine organisms, mainly in mollusks. This study aimed at isolating and identifying strains of V. vulnificus based upon the analysis of twenty samples of seabob shrimp, Xiphopenaeus kroyeri (Heller), purchased at the Mucuripe fish market (Fortaleza, Brazil). TCBS agar was used to isolate suspect strains. Seven of twenty-nine strains isolated from six different samples were confirmed as such by means of biochemical evidence and thus submitted to biological assays to determine their virulence. The susceptibility of the V. vulnificus strains to a number of antibiotics was tested. None of the V. vulnificus strains showed signs of virulence during a 24-hour observation period, possibly due to the shedding of the capsules by the cells. As to the results of the antimicrobial susceptibility tests, the seven above-mentioned V. vulnificus strains were found to be sensitive to nitrofurantoin (NT), ciprofloxacin (CIP), gentamicin (GN) and chloramphenicol (CO) and resistant to clindamycin (CI), penicillin (PN) and ampicillin (AP).


Subject(s)
Decapoda/microbiology , Shellfish/microbiology , Vibrio/isolation & purification , Animals , Bacterial Typing Techniques , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Vibrio/classification , Vibrio/drug effects
5.
Vision Res ; 41(20): 2601-6, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11520506

ABSTRACT

Spatial ratios of cone excitations produced by light reflected by different surfaces in a scene may provide the cue for discriminating changes in illuminant from changes in surface reflectances. To test whether these ratios can be computed across the two eyes, observers were presented with simulations on a computer-controlled monitor of pairs of juxtaposed or separated Munsell surfaces undergoing an illuminant change with a small change in cone-excitation ratios or a change with constant cone-excitation ratios. Surfaces were viewed either binocularly or dichoptically. Observers reliably discriminated the two changes in both viewing conditions, although less well dichoptically. Cone-excitation ratios, which may in principle be computed retinally, may also be computed cortically.


Subject(s)
Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/physiology , Vision, Binocular/physiology , Computer Simulation , Humans , Lighting , Vision, Monocular/physiology , Visual Pathways/physiology
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 98(14): 8151-6, 2001 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11438751

ABSTRACT

The perceived colors of reflecting surfaces generally remain stable despite changes in the spectrum of the illuminating light. This color constancy can be measured operationally by asking observers to distinguish illuminant changes on a scene from changes in the reflecting properties of the surfaces comprising it. It is shown here that during fast illuminant changes, simultaneous changes in spectral reflectance of one or more surfaces in an array of other surfaces can be readily detected almost independent of the numbers of surfaces, suggesting a preattentive, spatially parallel process. This process, which is perfect over a spatial window delimited by the anatomical fovea, may form an early input to a multistage analysis of surface color, providing the visual system with information about a rapidly changing world in advance of the generation of a more elaborate and stable perceptual representation.


Subject(s)
Color Perception , Models, Theoretical , Humans , Light , Lighting
7.
Vision Res ; 41(3): 285-93, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11164445

ABSTRACT

To test whether temporal transient cues could improve colour-constancy estimates, surface-colour matches were made across two Mondrian patterns illuminated by different daylights: the patterns were presented either in the same position in an alternating sequence or, as a control, simultaneously side-by-side. The degree of colour constancy was significantly higher with sequential stimulus presentation than with simultaneous presentation, in the best condition reaching 0.87 on a scale of 0 to 1 for matches averaged over 20 observers. The variance between observers was also markedly reduced with sequential stimulus presentation. The visual system appears to have mechanisms not requiring adaptation that can provide almost unbiased information about surface colour under changing illuminants.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Cues , Lighting , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Observer Variation
8.
J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis ; 17(2): 225-31, 2000 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10680624

ABSTRACT

Relational color constancy, which refers to the constancy of perceived relations between surface colors under changes in illuminant, may be based on the computation of spatial ratios of cone excitations. As this activity need occur only within rather than between cone pathways, relational color constancy might be assumed to be based on relative luminance processing. This hypothesis was tested in a psychophysical experiment in which observers viewed simulated images of Mondrian patterns undergoing colorimetric changes that could be attributed either to an illuminant change or to a nonilluminant change; the images were isoluminant, achromatic, or unmodified. Observers reliably discriminated the two types of changes in all three conditions, implying that relational color constancy is not based on luminance cues alone. A computer simulation showed that in these isoluminant and achromatic images spatial ratios of cone excitations and of combinations of cone excitations were almost invariant under illuminant changes and that discrimination performance could be predicted from deviations in these ratios.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Color , Light , Models, Biological , Adult , Computer Simulation , Humans , Psychophysics/methods , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/physiology
9.
Proc Biol Sci ; 264(1386): 1395-402, 1997 Sep 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9332018

ABSTRACT

Ratios of excitations in each cone-photoreceptor class produced by light reflected from pairs of surfaces in a scene are almost invariant under natural illuminant changes. The stability of these spatially defined ratios may explain the remarkable ability of human observers to efficiently discriminate illuminant changes from changes in surface reflectances. Spatial cone-excitation ratios are not, however, exactly invariant. This study is concerned with observers' sensitivity to these invariance violations. Simulations of Mondrian paintings with either 49 or two natural surfaces under Planckian illuminants were presented as images on a computer-controlled display in a two-interval experimental design: in one interval, the surfaces underwent an illuminant change; in the other interval, the surfaces underwent the same change but the images were then corrected so that, for each cone class, ratios of excitations were preserved exactly. Although the intervals with corrected images corresponded individually to highly improbable natural events, observers systematically misidentified them as containing the illuminant changes, the probability of error increasing as the violation of invariance in the other interval increased. For the range of illuminants and surfaces tested, sensitivity to violations of invariance was found to depend on cone class: it was greatest for long-wavelength-sensitive cones and least for short-wavelength-sensitive cones. Spatial cone-excitation ratios, or some closely related quantities, seem to be the cues preferred by observers for making inferences about surface illuminant changes.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/physiology , Color , Humans , Lighting , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/radiation effects , Surface Properties
10.
Vision Res ; 37(10): 1341-5, 1997 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9205725

ABSTRACT

Four issues concerning colour constancy and relational colour constancy are briefly considered: (1) the equivalence of colour constancy and relational colour constancy; (2) the dependence of relational colour constancy on ratios of cone excitations due to light from different reflecting surfaces, and the association of such ratios with von Kries' coefficient rule; (3) the contribution of chromatic edges to colour constancy and relational colour constancy; and (4) the effects of instruction and observer training. It is suggested that cognitive factors affect colour constancy more than relational colour constancy, which may be an inherently more robust phenomenon.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Eye Movements , Humans , Learning , Light , Spectrophotometry
11.
Vision Res ; 37(21): 2975-9, 1997 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9425513

ABSTRACT

Gaussian light distributions are important stimuli for vision research, but are difficult to produce for Maxwellian viewing conditions. In this study, two binary Maxwellian-view masks which produce smooth light distributions on the retina were considered: one was an out-of-focus circular aperture; the other was an in-focus pattern of opaque squares with a prescribed size distribution. The diffraction images of the two masks on the retina were computed numerically and shown to be well described by gaussian functions. As an experimental test, a mask with the desired pattern of opaque squares was manufactured by evaporation of chromium over a quartz substrate; its quality, as assessed by micro-transmittance measurements, was found to be adequate for most visual applications.


Subject(s)
Photic Stimulation/methods , Humans , Light , Models, Biological , Normal Distribution , Optics and Photonics , Psychophysics , Retina/radiation effects
12.
Proc Biol Sci ; 257(1349): 115-21, 1994 Aug 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7972159

ABSTRACT

Quantitative measurements of perceptual colour constancy show that human observers have a limited and variable ability to match coloured surfaces in scenes illuminated by different light sources. Observers can, however, make fast and reliable discriminations between changes in illuminant and changes in the reflecting properties of scenes, a discriminative ability that might be based on a visual coding of spatial colour relations. This coding could be provided by the ratios of cone-photoreceptor excitations produced by light from different surfaces: for a large class of pigmented surfaces and for surfaces with random spectral reflectances, these ratios are statistically almost invariant under changes in illumination by light from the sun and sky or from a planckian radiator. Cone-excitation ratios offer a possible, although not necessarily unique, basis for perceptual colour constancy in so far as it concerns colour relations.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/physiology , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/radiation effects , Color , Humans , Light , Models, Biological , Optics and Photonics , Photic Stimulation
13.
Rev Bras Biol ; 50(3): 619-25, 1990 Aug.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2098852

ABSTRACT

Two egg groups from four clutches of the Amazon turtle, Podocnemis expansa, were incubated at 32-34 degrees C and 35-38 degrees C, respectively. The incubation of the first group lasted approximately 47 days and the second 43 days. To standardize the stages, a series of 25 stages was recorded, based on observation of morphological evolution related to incubation duration and its respective temperatures.


Subject(s)
Turtles/embryology , Animals , Temperature
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