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Published byJulia McDonald Modified over 9 years ago
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Where vision is concerned, light is generally specified in photometric units, not in quanta (photons) and energy
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Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage (CIE)
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Fig. A-1. The photopic (V ) and scotopic (V ’)curves of relative luminosity as standardized by the Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage (CIE). Modified from Wright (1958)
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Just because something is twice as intense does not mean it is twice as bright!!
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Photometric Terminology Point Source Luminous flux is emitted in all directions from a point source of light. A lumen is equivalent to 4.07 x 10 15 quanta/ second at 555 nm. Luminous intensity is luminous flux in a solid angle. A candela is defined as one lumen/ steradian. Luminance is the light that comes off a surface whether reflected or emitted. It is measured in candelas/unit area iIluminance is what falls on a surface. It is measured in lumens/ unit area r B A
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A steradian is "the solid angle subtended at the center of a sphere of radius r by a portion of the surface of the sphere having an area r2."
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Fig. A.2 Point Source Luminous flux is emitted in all directions from a point source of light. A lumen is equivalent to 4.07 x 10 15 quanta/ second at 555 nm. Luminous intensity is luminous flux in a solid angle. A candela is defined as one lumen/ steradian. Luminance is the light that comes off a surface whether reflected or emitted. It is measured in candelas/unit area iIluminance is what falls on a surface. It is measured in lumens/ unit area r B A
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Point Source Luminous flux is emitted in all directions from a point source of light. A lumen is equivalent to 4.07 x 10 15 quanta/ second at 555 nm. Luminous intensity is luminous flux in a solid angle. A candela is defined as one lumen/ steradian. Luminance is the light that comes off a surface whether reflected or emitted. It is measured in candelas/unit area iIluminance is what falls on a surface. It is measured in lumens/ unit area r B A
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Point Source Luminous flux is emitted in all directions from a point source of light. A lumen is equivalent to 4.07 x 10 15 quanta/ second at 555 nm. Luminous intensity is luminous flux in a solid angle. A candela is defined as one lumen/ steradian. Luminance is the light that comes off a surface whether reflected or emitted. It is measured in candelas/unit area iIluminance is what falls on a surface. It is measured in lumens/ unit area r B A
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Point Source Luminous flux is emitted in all directions from a point source of light. A lumen is equivalent to 4.07 x 10 15 quanta/ second at 555 nm. Luminous intensity is luminous flux in a solid angle. A candela is defined as one lumen/ steradian. Luminance is the light that comes off a surface whether reflected or emitted. It is measured in candelas/unit area iIluminance is what falls on a surface. It is measured in lumens/ unit area r B A
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Point Source Luminous flux is emitted in all directions from a point source of light. A lumen is equivalent to 4.07 x 10 15 quanta/ second at 555 nm. Luminous intensity is luminous flux in a solid angle. A candela is defined as one lumen/ steradian. Luminance is the light that comes off a surface whether reflected or emitted. It is measured in candelas/unit area iIluminance is what falls on a surface. It is measured in lumens/ unit area r B A
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Photopic Scotopic Mesopic
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Contrast is not a photometric term.Contrast is an expression of luminous difference between two surfaces. The standard quantitative definition of contrast for a target on a background is: BBT /L)L(L Eq. A.4 where L B is the luminance of the reference surface and L T is the luminance of the second surface. If L T > L B then the contrast is positive; otherwise it is negative. This is sometimes called “Weber Contrast”
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The contrast of sine-wave gratings is measured differently Fig. 6.6
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Sine-wave gratings are measured in terms of their spatial frequency defined as the number of cycles per degree of visual angle Fig. 6.7
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Specifying and Using Visual Angle Stimulus size is often expressed in terms of visual angle Fig. A.3
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Specifying and Using Visual Angle Stimulus size is often expressed in terms of visual angle Two advantages: 1)Provides a measure of the stimulus size on the retina 2)That allows investigators in other labs to duplicate the stimulus size (without needing to duplicate the equipment)
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Objects A and B are the same size, but subtend different angles on the retina because they are at different distances from the cornea Object C subtends the same angle as object A, so A and C would be indistinguishable based on retinal size and position alone Can calculate the visual angles subtended by the visual stimuli:
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Visual angles are expressed in degrees, minutes or seconds of arc Large stimuli subtend visual angles expressed in degrees ( ) (e.g., a 10 spot) There are 360 in a circle Smaller stimuli are described in minutes (’) of arc There are 60’ in 1 of arc Still smaller stimuli are expressed in second (”) of arc There are 60” in 1’ of arc
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