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1.
Policy Insights Behav Brain Sci ; 11(1): 43-50, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38933347

RESUMO

Sensory systems continuously recalibrate their responses according to the current stimulus environment. As a result, perception is strongly affected by the current and recent context. These adaptative changes affect both sensitivity (e.g., habituating to noise, seeing better in the dark) and appearance (e.g. how things look, what catches attention) and adjust to many perceptual properties (e.g. from light level to the characteristics of someone's face). They therefore have a profound effect on most perceptual experiences, and on how and how well the senses work in different settings. Characterizing the properties of adaptation, how it manifests, and when it influences perception in modern environments can provide insights into the diversity of human experience. Adaptation could also be leveraged both to optimize perceptual abilities (e.g. in visual inspection tasks like radiology) and to mitigate unwanted consequences (e.g. exposure to potentially unhealthy stimulus environments).

2.
Opt Express ; 30(12): 20999-21015, 2022 Jun 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36224831

RESUMO

One strategy for aiding color deficiencies is to use three narrow passbands to filter the light spectrum to increase the saturation of colors. This filtering is analogous to the narrow emission bands used in wide gamut lighting or displays. We examined how perception adapts to the greater color gamut area produced by such devices, testing color-normal observers and simulated environments. Narrowband spectra increased chromatic contrasts but also increased contrast adaptation, partially offsetting the perceived contrast enhancements. Such adaptation adjustments are important for understanding the perceptual consequences of exposure to naturally or artificially enhanced color gamut areas for both color-deficient and color-normal observers.


Assuntos
Defeitos da Visão Cromática , Visão de Cores , Cor , Percepção de Cores , Defeitos da Visão Cromática/diagnóstico , Humanos , Luz , Iluminação
3.
Color Res Appl ; 47(3): 555-564, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35450094

RESUMO

Color-normal subjects sometimes disagree about metameric matches involving highly structured SPDs, because their cone fundamentals differ slightly, but non-negligibly. This has significant implications for the design of light sources and displays, so it should be estimated. We propose a broadly applicable estimation method based on a simple adaptive "front-end" interface that can be used with any selected standard color appearance model. The interface accepts, as input, any set of color matching functions for the individual subject (for example, these could be that person's cone response functions) and also the associated tristimulus values for the test stimulus and also for the reference stimulus (i.e. reference white). The interface converts this data into tristimulus values of the form used by the selected color appearance model (which could, for example, be X, Y, Z), while also carrying out the needed transform, which is based on an estimate of the subject's likely previous long-term adaptations to their unique cone fundamentals. The selected standard color appearance model then provides color appearance data that is an estimate of the color appearance of the test stimulus, for that individual subject. This information has the advantage of being interpretable within that model's well-known color space. The adaptive front end is based on the fact that, for any selected input SPD and the subject's unique color matching functions, there can be many different SPDs that are metameric for that individual. Since observer-to-observer color perception differences are minimized for spectrally smooth SPDs, smooth metamers predict color appearances reasonably accurately.

4.
Color Res Appl ; 46(4): 759-773, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34334884

RESUMO

Color appearance models use standard color matching functions to derive colorimetric information from spectral radiometric measurements of a visual environment, and they process that information to predict color perceptual attributes such as hue, chroma and lightness. That processing is usually done by equations with fixed numerical coefficients that were predetermined to yield optimal agreement for a given standard observer. Here we address the well-known fact that, among color-normal observers, there are significant differences of color matching functions. These cause disagreements between individuals as to whether certain colors match, an important effect that is often called observer metamerism. Yet how these individual sensitivity differences translate into differences in perceptual metrics is not fully addressed by many appearance models. It might seem that appearance could be predicted by substituting an individual's color matching functions into an otherwise-unchanged color appearance model, but this is problematic because the model's coefficients were not optimized for the new observer. Here we explore a solution guided by the idea that processes of adaptation in the visual system tend to compensate color perception for differences in cone responses and consequent color matching functions. For this purpose, we developed a simple color appearance model that uses only a few numerical coefficients, yet accurately predicts the perceptual attributes of Munsell samples under a selected standard lighting condition. We then added a feedback loop to automatically adjust the model coefficients, in response to switching between cone fundamentals simulating different observers and color matching functions. This adjustment is intended to model long term contrast adaptation in the vision system by maintaining average overall color contrast levels. Incorporating this adaptation principle into color appearance models could allow better assessments of displays and illumination systems, to help improve color appearances for most observers.

5.
Appl Opt ; 60(36): 11144-11150, 2021 Dec 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35201102

RESUMO

Multi-layer optical thin films can reflect light to guide it along a hollow tube that they internally line. However, reflecting broadband white light for a range of angles requires many precise thin optical layers, which can be too expensive for large-scale applications such as architectural illumination. Here, we present an alternative configuration that requires only one readily achievable aspect of precision-having a substantially constant cross section, perpendicular to the planned longitudinal propagation direction. This aspect conserves a light ray's longitudinal directional component, while the ray's path in the perpendicular direction can be macroscopically chaotic, much like the diffuse reflection characteristic arising from many non-absorbing pigment particles. This macroscopic characteristic is described here as "longitudinally specular" and "transversely diffuse." This new design overcomes two problems that are found with current prism light guides (PLGs), which are a class of hollow light guides that also have a constant cross section. The PLG has two problems: (1) it requires structured surfaces having near-perfect linear prisms that are much larger than the wavelength of light, wasting optical material and increasing absorption; (2) it only works well with light that has been partially collimated, which limits étendue and requires expensive, inefficient input optics. In this paper, a new, to the best of our knowledge, approach, labeled a "multi-layer prism light guide," simultaneously addresses both problems. Although the new structure is more complex than a conventional PLG, it may be simpler to manufacture. One potential application is for guiding sunlight into buildings for illumination purposes, without requiring complex sun-tracking solar collection optics.

6.
Annu Rev Vis Sci ; 5: 479-502, 2019 09 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31226013

RESUMO

Human vision provides useful information about the shape and color of the objects around us. It works well in many, but not all, lighting conditions. Since the advent of human-made light sources, it has been important to understand how illumination affects vision quality, but this has been surprisingly difficult. The widespread introduction of solid-state light emitters has increased the urgency of this problem. Experts still debate how lighting can best enable high-quality vision-a key issue since about one-fifth of global electrical power production is used to make light. Photometry, the measurement of the visual quantity of light, is well established, yet significant uncertainties remain. Colorimetry, the measurement of color, has achieved good reproducibility, but researchers still struggle to understand how illumination can best enable high-quality color vision. Fortunately, in recent years, considerable progress has been made. Here, we summarize the current understanding and discuss key areas for future study.


Assuntos
Percepção de Cores/fisiologia , Visão de Cores/fisiologia , Iluminação , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Cones/fisiologia , Visão Ocular/fisiologia , Humanos , Fotometria
7.
Appl Opt ; 58(8): 2028-2032, 2019 Mar 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30874070

RESUMO

We present a method for substantially enhancing the rate of heat transfer into and out of the working fluid of a heat engine, using bidirectional thermal radiation exchange between the external environment and many individual graphene layers that are dispersed and suspended within an inert gas. This hybrid working fluid has the unique composite property of high optical absorption/emission yet low specific heat. Consequently, it can heat and cool rapidly, enabling a much greater cycle frequency and a commensurate increase in specific power, in comparison to conventional closed-cycle heat engines for which the cycle frequency is limited by the use of slower, non-radiative, thermal transfer.

8.
J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis ; 33(3): A319-31, 2016 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26974939

RESUMO

An important goal in characterizing human color vision is to order color percepts in a way that captures their similarities and differences. This has resulted in the continuing evolution of "uniform color spaces," in which the distances within the space represent the perceptual differences between the stimuli. While these metrics are now very successful in predicting how color percepts are scaled, they do so in largely empirical, ad hoc ways, with limited reference to actual mechanisms of color vision. In this article our aim is to instead begin with general and plausible assumptions about color coding, and then develop a model of color appearance that explicitly incorporates them. We show that many of the features of empirically defined color order systems (those of Munsell, Pantone, NCS, and others) as well as many of the basic phenomena of color perception, emerge naturally from fairly simple principles of color information encoding in the visual system and how it can be optimized for the spectral characteristics of the environment.


Assuntos
Percepção de Cores/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Adaptação Ocular/efeitos da radiação , Percepção de Cores/efeitos da radiação , Visão de Cores/fisiologia , Visão de Cores/efeitos da radiação , Humanos , Luz , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Cones/citologia , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Cones/efeitos da radiação
9.
Opt Express ; 23(12): 15888-906, 2015 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26193567

RESUMO

We have developed a two-measure system for evaluating light sources' color rendition that builds upon conceptual progress of numerous researchers over the last two decades. The system quantifies the color fidelity and color gamut (change in object chroma) of a light source in comparison to a reference illuminant. The calculations are based on a newly developed set of reflectance data from real samples uniformly distributed in color space (thereby fairly representing all colors) and in wavelength space (thereby precluding artificial optimization of the color rendition scores by spectral engineering). The color fidelity score R(f) is an improved version of the CIE color rendering index. The color gamut score R(g) is an improved version of the Gamut Area Index. In combination, they provide two complementary assessments to guide the optimization of future light sources. This method summarizes the findings of the Color Metric Task Group of the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IES). It is adopted in the upcoming IES TM-30-2015, and is proposed for consideration with the International Commission on Illumination (CIE).

10.
Laterality ; 19(3): 325-39, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23931149

RESUMO

Contralateral control, the arrangement whereby most of the human motor and sensory fibres cross the midline in order to provide control for contralateral portions of the body, presents a puzzle from an evolutionary perspective. What caused such a counterintuitive and complex arrangement to become dominant? In this paper we offer a new perspective on this question by showing that in a complex interactive control system there could be a significant net survival advantage with contralateral control, associated with the effect of injuries of intermediate severity. In such cases an advantage could arise from a combination of non-linear system response combined with correlations between injuries on the same side of the head and body. We show that a simple mathematical model of these ideas emulates such an advantage. Based on this model, we conclude that effects of this kind are a plausible driving force for the evolution of contralateral control.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Lateralidade Funcional , Modelos Biológicos , Sobrevida/fisiologia , Animais , Humanos , Dinâmica não Linear , Ferimentos e Lesões/fisiopatologia
11.
Appl Opt ; 52(31): 7469-78, 2013 Nov 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24216645

RESUMO

The reflectance of a surface can be altered by controlling the concentration of dye ions in a region adjacent to an optically transparent and electrically conductive thin film. We present a method for nonmechanical light deflection achieved by altering the reflectance of a diffraction grating, an approach that creates new diffraction peaks that lie between those associated with the original grating spacing. We have demonstrated this effect by applying an electrical potential difference between interdigitated indium-tin oxide (ITO) electrodes and measuring the intensity of one of the new diffraction peaks. The measured diffraction peak intensities were found to reversibly deflect approximately 7% of the reflected light to previously nonexistent peaks. The diffraction grating was formed by patterning a thin film of planar, untreated ITO on a glass substrate using standard photolithography techniques. The size scale for this method of electrically controlled diffraction is limited only by the lithographic process; thus there is potential for the grating to deflect light to angles greater than those achievable using other methods. This approach could be used in applications such as telecommunications, where large deflection angles are required, or other applications where alternate beam-steering methods are cost prohibitive.

12.
Appl Opt ; 52(34): 8239-44, 2013 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24513824

RESUMO

We investigate the effect of new point spread functions (PSFs) on the uniformity and contrast of high dynamic range displays that use local dimming of LEDs to yield a large dynamic range. A PSF shaped like a quadratic B-spline was hypothesized to create a uniform brightness backlight, as well as producing linear and quadratic gradients, while maintaining a very high contrast. We have found a practical optical structure to produce such a PSF, yielding a nonuniformity of only ±0.8%, while enabling a contrast ratio of 5∶1 and 33∶1 over distances of one and two unit cell spacings, respectively.

13.
Appl Opt ; 51(11): 1645-53, 2012 Apr 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22505153

RESUMO

This work involves a new optical application for transparent superhydrophobic materials, which enables low-energy optical contact between a liquid and solid surface. The new technique described here uses this surface property to control the reflectance of a surface using frustration of total internal reflection. Surface chemistry and appropriate micro-scale and nano-scale geometries are combined to produce interfaces with low adhesion to water and the degree to which incident light is reflected at this interface is controlled by the movement of water, thereby modifying the optical characteristics at the interface. The low adhesion of water to superhydrophobic surfaces is particularly advantageous in imaging applications where power use must be minimized. This paper describes the general approach, as well as a proof-of-principle experiment in which the reflectance was controlled by moving a water drop into and out of contact with a superhydrophobic surface by variation of applied electrostatic pressure.

14.
Appl Opt ; 48(6): 1062-72, 2009 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23567565

RESUMO

Electro-optical modulation by electrophoresis of dye ions is a promising technique for applications such as electronic paper displays and nonmechanical beam steering devices. To achieve a sufficient response rate in these devices, the transition time between two different optical states can be decreased by increasing the magnitude of the voltage applied across the electrodes, but this also leads to irreversible and undesirable electrochemical reactions. An electron tunneling model has been developed to describe the electrochemical reaction and to better understand the conditions determining its onset. The model gives rise to three predictions that were subsequently confirmed experimentally: the magnitude of the applied surface charge density should determine the rate of electrochemical activity, the bulk concentration of ions in the solution should shift the threshold voltage at which electrochemical reactions occur, and the reaction rate should be substantially enhanced around nanometer-sized bumps on the electrode surface. Applying this new understanding, the transition time of a device incorporating porous zinc antimonate (ZnSb2O6) electrodes and a solution of Methylene Blue dye in methanol was reduced by a factor of approximately 20.

15.
Langmuir ; 23(10): 5591-600, 2007 May 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17425343

RESUMO

We describe a novel technology based on changes in the resonant frequency of an acoustically actuated surface and use it to measure temporal changes in the surface energy gamma (N m(-1)) of an elastomeric polymer membrane due to the adsorption of macromolecules from aqueous solution. The resonant elastomeric surface-tension (REST) sensor permits simultaneous determination of mass loading kinetics and gamma(t) for a given adsorption process, thereby providing a multivariable data set from which to build and test models of the kinetics of adsorption at solid-liquid interfaces. The technique is used to measure gamma(t) during the adsorption of either sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) or hen egg-white lysozyme (HEWL) onto an acrylic polymer membrane. The adsorption of SDS is reversible and is characterized by a decrease in gamma over a time period that coincides with that required for the mass loading of the membrane. For the adsorption of HEWL labeled with Alexa Fluor 532 dye, gamma continues to change long after the surface concentration of labeled HEWL, measured by using the elastomeric polymer membrane as an optical waveguide, reaches steady state. Gradual but significant changes in gamma(t) are observed as long as the concentration of protein in the bulk solution, c(b), remains nonzero. HEWL remains adsorbed to the membrane when c(b) = 0, but changes in gamma(t) are not observed under this condition, indicating that the interaction of bound protein molecules with those free in solution contribute to the prolonged change in the surface energy. This observation has been used to define a new model for the kinetics of globular protein adsorption to a solid-liquid interface that includes a mechanism by which the molecules in the bulk can facilitate the desorption of a sorbate molecule or change the energetic states of adsorbed molecules and, thus, the overall surface energy. The model is shown to capture the unique features of protein adsorption kinetics, including the relatively fast mass loading, the much more gradual change in surface energy that does not cease until the protein is removed from the bulk, the rapid desorption of an incubation-time-dependent fraction of bound protein when the protein is removed from the bulk, and the fixing of the residual surface concentration and surface energy at constant values once the removal of reversibly bound protein and free protein is complete.


Assuntos
Membranas Artificiais , Modelos Químicos , Muramidase/química , Dodecilsulfato de Sódio/química , Resinas Acrílicas/química , Adsorção , Cinética , Transição de Fase , Propriedades de Superfície
16.
Appl Opt ; 45(27): 6998-7004, 2006 Sep 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16946777

RESUMO

It has been observed that retroreflective materials can be used in combination with beam splitters to produce real images. This is practical on a large size scale but has a maximum optical efficiency of 25%. Conversely, curved reflectors efficiently produce real images, but their cost increases very rapidly with size. We introduce a new imaging method, which combines the advantages of both systems, through the use of a linear retroreflective film. This material is retroreflective in one plane and conventionally reflective in the perpendicular plane. The net result is an efficient real image system that can have unlimited extent in one transverse direction, and which can be inexpensively manufactured on a large scale.

17.
Appl Opt ; 45(6): 1169-76, 2006 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16523779

RESUMO

Reflection at an interface between two materials can be modulated by means of varying the optical properties at the interface. We have studied this modulation of the reflected light with an aim to develop a flashing retroreflector for roadside conspicuity applications. Reflectance modulation has previously been studied under the conditions of total internal reflection (TIR), where a light-absorbing material placed in the associated evanescent wave region can be used to attenuate the intensity of the reflected light. If instead the light rays strike the interface at an angle that is slightly smaller than the critical angle required for TIR, they instead undergo a substantial, but partial, reflection. We have demonstrated that an analogous attenuation effect to the TIR situation is observed, even though there is no evanescent wave present under these circumstances. We have studied this behavior and have developed a model to describe the motion of the absorbing material and the related interference effects that occur.

18.
Appl Opt ; 44(9): 1601-9, 2005 Mar 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15813262

RESUMO

A model based on geometrical optics has been developed to describe the photometric observations associated with a novel method to control the reflectance of a surface. In this new reflectance modulation approach, electrophoresis of pigment particles is used to absorb light reflected by total internal reflection (TIR). The pigment particles are sufficiently small that they substantially do not scatter light, but rather they modify the effective refractive index at the reflection interface. An incident light ray interacting with this modified effective index is attenuated in a spectrally selective manner. Although frustrated TIR has been understood and used in various applications for some time, in this case it is used to substantially modify the color of the reflected light, which to our knowledge has not been previously reported. A numerical model of the pigment particle distribution has been developed to describe the observations.

19.
Electrophoresis ; 26(1): 82-90, 2005 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15624147

RESUMO

We present a novel means of transporting molecules in solution by applying a zero-time-average alternating motive force to the molecules, and perturbing the molecular drag coefficient synchronously with the applied force, thus causing a net drift in a direction determined by the phase of the alternating drag perturbation relative to the alternating force. We apply an electrophoretic form of the method to transport and concentrate DNA in a gel, such that all molecules migrate on average away from the nearest electrode and toward a central region. Since an electrode does not occupy this central region, this method presents the possibility of transporting and focusing DNA and other charged molecules in regions free from electrodes and the associated electrochemistry.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Focalização Isoelétrica/métodos , Soluções
20.
Appl Opt ; 43(4): 808-13, 2004 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14960074

RESUMO

It has recently been noted that hemispherical structures have useful reflection characteristics. We describe a new application that makes use of these characteristics by controlling the reflectance of a surface composed of an array of hemispherical liquid droplets. In this system the reflectance state is spatially controlled through the use of electrowetting to alter the shape of an array of droplets. This may have an application in the field of electronic image displays.

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