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Showing papers on "Contrast (vision) published in 1990"



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A definition of local band-limited contrast in images is proposed that assigns a contrast value to every point in the image as a function of the spatial frequency band and is helpful in understanding the effects of image-processing algorithms on the perceived contrast.
Abstract: The physical contrast of simple images such as sinusoidal gratings or a single patch of light on a uniform background is well defined and agrees with the perceived contrast, but this is not so for complex images. Most definitions assign a single contrast value to the whole image, but perceived contrast may vary greatly across the image. Human contrast sensitivity is a function of spatial frequency; therefore the spatial frequency content of an image should be considered in the definition of contrast. In this paper a definition of local band-limited contrast in images is proposed that assigns a contrast value to every point in the image as a function of the spatial frequency band. For each frequency band, the contrast is defined as the ratio of the bandpass-filtered image at the frequency to the low-pass image filtered to an octave below the same frequency (local luminance mean). This definition raises important implications regarding the perception of contrast in complex images and is helpful in understanding the effects of image-processing algorithms on the perceived contrast. A pyramidal image-contrast structure based on this definition is useful in simulating nonlinear, threshold characteristics of spatial vision in both normal observers and the visually impaired.

1,370 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Measurements of contrast sensitivity were obtained from isolated neurons in the lateral geniculate nucleus, striate cortex, and middle temporal visual area of macaque monkeys and show that many neuron in the middle temporal area are more sensitive than any cell encountered in early stages.

686 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
04 Jan 1990-Nature
TL;DR: It is reported that the colour-opponent channel is essential for the processing of colour, texture, fine pattern and fine stereopsis, whereas the broad-band channel is crucial for the perception of fast flicker and motion.
Abstract: The colour-opponent and broad-band channels of the primate visual system originate in the retina and remain segregated through several neural stations in the visual system. Until now inferences about their function in vision have been based primarily on studies examining single-cell receptive field properties which have shown that the colour-opponent retinal ganglion cells have small receptive fields, produce sustained responses and receive spatially segregated inputs from different cone types; the broad-band cells have large receptive fields, respond transiently and receive cone inputs that are not spatially separated. We have now examined the visual capacities of rhesus monkeys before and after interrupting either of these channels with small lesions at the lateral geniculate nucleus. Here we report that the colour-opponent channel is essential for the processing of colour, texture, fine pattern and fine stereopsis, whereas the broad-band channel is crucial for the perception of fast flicker and motion. Little or no deficits were found in brightness and coarse-shape discrimination, low spatial frequency stereopsis and contrast sensitivity after the disruption of either of the channels.

423 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A significant reduction in contrast sensitivity of the older age group is demonstrated at all but the lowest combinations of spatial and temporal frequencies investigated.

239 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of various display parameters, such as resolution, addressability, contrast, luminance, display size, and viewing distance, on subjective image quality is taken into account.
Abstract: After a short survey of some other metrics of perceived image quality, the square-root integral (SQRI) is described. In this metric a fixed mathematical expression for the contrast sensitivity of the eye is used. With the SQRI method the effect of various display parameters, such as resolution, addressability, contrast, luminance, display size, and viewing distance, on subjective image quality can be taken into account. Experimental data of subjective image quality, measured by various authors, are compared with calculated SQRI values. From the comparison it appears that the calculated SQRI values show a good linear correlation with perceived subjective image quality not only at variation of resolution but also at simultaneous variation of other display parameters.

215 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Color and contrast sensitivity in the magnocellular and parvocellular subdivisions of the lateral geniculate body and in layers 2, 3, 4B, and 4C alpha of visual area 1 is tested to obtain physiological data on the degree of segregation of the 2 pathways and on the fate of the color and contrast information as it is transmitted from the geniculates to the cortex.
Abstract: We tested color and contrast sensitivity in the magnocellular and parvocellular subdivisions of the lateral geniculate body and in layers 2, 3, 4B, and 4C alpha of visual area 1 to obtain physiological data on the degree of segregation of the 2 pathways and on the fate of the color and contrast information as it is transmitted from the geniculate to the cortex. On average, magnocellular geniculate cells were much less responsive than parvocellular cells to shifts between 2 equiluminant colors. Nevertheless, many magnocellular cells (though not all) continued to give some response at equiluminance. As expected from previous studies, luminance contrast sensitivity differed markedly between magnocellular and parvocellular layers. In V-1, the properties of cells in the magnorecipient layers 4C alpha and 4B faithfully reflected the properties of magnocellular geniculate cells, showing no evidence of any parvocellular input. Like magnocellular geniculate cells, they showed high contrast sensitivity, and with color contrast stimuli they showed large response decrements at equiluminance. In the interblob regions of cortical layers 2 and 3, which anatomically appear to receive most of their inputs from parvorecipient layer 4C beta, contrast sensitivities of some of the cells were compatible with a predominantly parvocellular input. Other interblob cells had sensitivities intermediate between magno- and parvocellular geniculate cells, suggesting a possible contribution from the magnocellular system. Many cells in cortical layers 2 and 3 responded to color-contrast borders equally well at all relative brightnesses of the 2 colors, including equiluminance. We recorded from many direction- and disparity-selective cells in V-1: most of the direction-selective and all of the clearly stereo-selective cells were located in layer 4B.

196 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There appeared to be two phases in the development of contrast sensitivity and acuity: between 4 and 9 weeks overall contrast sensitivity increased by a factor of 4-5 at all spatial frequencies, while sensitivity increased systematically at higher spatial frequencies.

196 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1990-Eye
TL;DR: It is suggested that binocular CS measurements using the Pelli-Robson chart provide useful additional information regarding the need for surgery in cataract patients.
Abstract: Conventional techniques for assessing the visual function of cataract patients include visual acuity (VA), contrast sensitivity (CS) and glare disability (GD). The extent to which these measurements provide accurate information about a patient's perceived visual disability is not known. In this study, binocular and monocular VA and CS and monocular GD measurements were made using commercially available techniques on 33 cataract patients. VA was measured using a Ferris-Bailey LogMAR chart and CS by the Pelli-Robson letter CS chart. Glare disability was measured using the Mentor Brightness Acuity Tester in conjunction with both the LogMAR and Pelli Robson charts. Each patient's perceived visual disability was quantified using a 20-point questionnaire about the effect of vision on everyday activities. There was little correlation between subjective visual disability and monocular or binocular VA measurements. Measurements of binocular CS, however, were highly correlated with the patient's perceived visual disability, particularly their subjective assessment of the effect of vision on their mobility-orientation. We suggest that binocular CS measurements using the Pelli-Robson chart provide useful additional information regarding the need for surgery in cataract patients.

170 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hemispheric asymmetries in the processing of spatial frequencies depend on the task, but only when the computational demands of the task exceed those required for the simple detection of the stimuli.
Abstract: The processing of sine-wave gratings presented to the left and right visual fields was examined in four experiments. Subjects were required either to detect the presence of a grating (Experiments 1 and 2) or to identify the spatial frequency of a grating (Experiments 3 and 4). Orthogonally to this, the stimuli were presented either at threshold levels of contrast (Experiments 1 and 3) or at suprathreshold levels (Experiments 2 and 4). Visual field and spatial frequency interacted when the task required identification of spatial frequency, but not when it required only stimulus detection. Regardless of contrast level (threshold, suprathreshold), high-frequency gratings were identified more readily in the right visual field (left hemisphere), whereas low-frequency gratings showed no visual field difference (Experiment 3) or were identified more readily in the left visual field (right hemisphere) (Experiment 4). Thus, hemispheric asymmetries in the processing of spatial frequencies depend on the task. These results support Sergent’s (1982) spatial frequency hypothesis, but only when the computational demands of the task exceed those required for the simple detection of the stimuli.

164 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that when the gratings within the plaid are of different contrast, the perceived direction is not predicted by the intersection of constraints rule, and a revised model, which incorporates a contrast-dependent weighting of perceived grating speed as observed for 1-D patterns, can quantitatively predict most of the results.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work uses colour matches to demonstrate that departures from "colour constancy" are large and that it is possible to obtain the same colour shifts when the complex Mondrian pattern is replaced by a homogeneous grey field surrounding a test patch.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: No evidence suggested differential effects of luminance polarity or hue, with the only exception that cool background colors tended to be preferred for the light-on-dark polarity.
Abstract: This study examined legibility performance and subjective preference for text/background color combinations displayed on a video monitor. Luminance contrast was fixed at two preoptimized levels, either with text brighter than the background (10:1) or vice versa (1:6.5). In Experiment 1, 32 subjects rated about 800 color combinations. No evidence suggested differential effects of luminance polarity or hue, with the only exception that cool background colors (blue and bluish cyan) tended to be preferred for the light-on-dark polarity. Saturation had the most important influence on ratings. Any desaturated color combination appears to be satisfactory for text presentation. In Experiment 2 a reduced set of 18 color combinations was investigated with a new sample of 18 subjects. Reading and search times as well as multidimensional ratings were evaluated. There was no evidence for an influence of luminance polarity or chromaticity on performance. Subjective ratings corresponded well with the results of Experiment 1.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that transparency models should utilize luminance, not reflectance, as the independent variable.
Abstract: Perceived transparency was studied as a constancy problem. In the episcotister (E-) model of scission, luminances are partitioned into layer and background components; four luminances determine values of two layer parameters that specify constancy of a transparent layer on different backgrounds. The E-model was tested in an experiment in which 12 Ss matched 24 pairs of four-luminance patterns by adjusting two luminances of the comparison pattern. Both the standard and the comparison were perceived as a transparent layer on a checkerboard. The E-model predicts matches when layer values are identical in the two patterns. One parameter was constant, constraining the adjustment along the second dimension. Obtained values corresponded well with E-predictions. Alternative models based on local luminance or average contrast ratios accounted for less variability. Results indicate that transparency models should utilize luminance, not reflectance, as the independent variable. Language: en

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is a definite difference in legibility between letters at contrast threshold as for letters at acuity threshold, and the very regular and pronounced miscalling of the letter C as an O should be accepted as a correct call during threshold measurements on the Pelli‐Robson chart.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The presence of a few cells driven by the amblyopic eye which can perform nearly as well as those from the fellow eye in processing high spatial frequencies gives new insight into the way in which strabismic and deprivation amblyopias differ.
Abstract: The acuities of cells in the primary visual cortex of five tenotomized strabismic cats were measured. Previous behavioural studies have shown such animals to possess a severe amblyopia of approximately 1.5 octaves of spatial frequency, yet the acuities of both retinal ganglion and lateral geniculate X-cells are normal. The receptive fields of the cortical cells sampled were within 5° of the area centralis projection. On average, the acuities of cortical cells driven by the amblyopic eye were nearly 1 octave less than those for the non-deviating eye. However, the best cell acuities for each eye were nearly the same. The relationship between ocular dominance and cell acuity was found to be different for the two eyes despite a symmetrical ocular dominance distribution. The acuity deficit for cells driven through the amblyopic eye was present at all depths along the electrode tracks. We conclude that in this model amblyopia, the initial spatial processing deficit lies in the visual cortex, and most probably in the cells of layer IV. Further-more, the presence of a few cells driven by the amblyopic eye which can perform nearly as well as those from the fellow eye in processing high spatial frequencies gives new insight into the way in which strabismic and deprivation amblyopias differ.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a test line changes its apparent orientation in a direction away from that of the surrounding lines using a nulling technique to arrive at numerical values, and the properties of this simultaneous orientation contrast have been analyzed: it diminishes with distance of the surround lines; rises and then falls off as a function of surround line orientation; decreases with exposure duration.

Journal Article
TL;DR: A short-term effect of levodopa is found on contrast sensitivity and fixation point scotomas in amblyopic eyes of adult patients and no changes could be detected after placebo administration.
Abstract: The neurotransmitter dopamine (DA) is involved in several visual functions. Visual deprivation decreases retinal DA concentration in chickens and monkeys. In animals with deprivation amblyopia, several studies suggest that neurotransmitters are involved in visual-cortical plasticity and can restore partial visual acuity in adult cats. We investigated in a cross-over, double-masked study the influence of levodopa on contrast sensitivity and binocular suppression in human adult strabismic and amblyopic patients. After one single administration of levodopa, a significant increase in contrast sensitivity and decrease of the size of the fixation point scotoma was found. No changes could be detected after placebo administration. Levodopa did not induce changes in contrast sensitivity in the dominant eyes of the patients or in normal subjects. In conclusion, we found a short-term effect of levodopa on contrast sensitivity and fixation point scotomas in amblyopic eyes of adult patients.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sweep VECP is concluded to be a valid method, giving estimates of acuity which correlate well with optotype acuity and correspond well to other clinical findings, and that it can be useful in the clinical management of nonverbal patients.
Abstract: Previous studies have indicated that visual acuities of normal infants can be estimated with good accuracy using swept spatial frequency visual-evoked-potentials (VECPs). In this report we describe acuity measurements obtained with this technique from 304 examinations performed on 135 children having various visual disorders. When possible, two or more different stimulation frequencies (8, 12, 15 or 24 contrast reversals/sec) were used in each patient, and three to eight sweep VECPs were obtained from each patient under each simulation and recording condition. High correlation coefficients (0.94 - 0.96) between the acuity estimated on each patient from either the single sweep giving the best visual acuity (BSS) or from vector averages (VeA) of the EEG data obtained from several sweeps confirmed previous findings in normal infants. We also found high correlation coefficients among BSS recorded at different temporal frequencies (0.79-0.97) and among comparisons of BSS or VeA acuity to optotype visual acuity (0.6-0.89). Children with clinically undetectable optokinetic responses showed lower visual acuity estimated by BSS than those who demonstrated optokinetic nystagmus. We conclude that the sweep VECP is a valid method, giving estimates of acuity which correlate well with optotype acuity and correspond well to other clinical findings, and that it can be useful in the clinical management of nonverbal patients.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the results of a study to assess variations in the indoor and outdoor locomotor mobility of 22 low vision adults were reported, including visual acuity, visual field, and contrast sensitivity data.
Abstract: This article reports the results of a study to assess variations in the indoor and outdoor locomotor mobility of 22 low vision adults. Visual acuity, visual field, and contrast sensitivity data wer...

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1990
TL;DR: For any form of microscopy, one needs not only an imaging system which has enough resolution to reveal the fine details of a specimen, but also a suitable contrast mechanism to see the structures of interest.
Abstract: For any form of microscopy, one needs not only an imaging system which has enough resolution to reveal the fine details of a specimen, but also, a suitable contrast mechanism to “see” the structures of interest. As defined by the New Webster’s Dictionary, contrast is the difference between light and dark areas of a negative or print. In other words, contrast is the difference in signal strength between various parts of an image or between details of interest and “background”. To be slightly more scientific, the detected contrast is proportional to the brightness difference, A I, between two image areas divided by the average image brightness, Ī.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that CS and GD measurements using the Pelli-Robson chart and the BAT provide valuable information regarding the management of patients with early cataract.
Abstract: Among the 80 subjects who were recruited with normal retinal and neural function, 54 had cataract and a visual acuity (VA) better than 6/24. The 26 age-matched subjects had clear media. Contrast sensitivity (CS) at low and intermediate spatial frequencies was measured using the Pelli-Robson letter chart. Two measures of glare disability (GD) were obtained using the Mentor Brightness Acuity Tester (BAT) in conjunction with a logMAR VA chart and the Pelli-Robson chart. Although CS is predominantly affected at high spatial frequencies in early cataract, we found that some subjects had reduced scores on the Pelli-Robson chart. This CS loss could not be predicted from VA measurements and was particularly found in subjects with posterior subcapsular cataract. High GD scores were found in a number of subjects with relatively good VA and could not be predicted from results of VA or CS. We suggest that CS and GD measurements using the Pelli-Robson chart and the BAT provide valuable information regarding the management of patients with early cataract.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reduced contrast affects stereoacuity more severely than hyperacuity, as also does shortening of exposure into a range of tens of milliseconds, even when the Bunsen−Roscoe−Bloch law has been factored out.
Abstract: Although stereoacuity and vernier acuity both yield comparable thresholds well below the eye’s resolution limit, the neural circuits for these two classes of visual responses do not process the signals in an identical manner. It had previously been demonstrated that hyperacuity is more resistant to image blur than stereoacuity and that the zones within which two targets must be placed to achieve the lowest thresholds differ quite radically. Two further differences are reported here: reduced contrast affects stereoacuity more severely than hyperacuity, as also does shortening of exposure into a range of tens of milliseconds, even when the Bunsen−Roscoe−Bloch law has been factored out.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Compared with a conventional monofocal implant, the contrast sensitivity of the multifocal patients followed a bimodal curve with a maximum sensitivity at the far focus and a second peak at the near focus, corresponding to about +3 diopters in the spectacle plane.
Abstract: Contrast sensitivity as a function of focus and visual acuity as a function of contrast were investigated in 19 patients with a diffractive multifocal intraocular lens and compared with 19 control patients with a conventional monofocal implant. The contrast sensitivity of the multifocal patients followed a bimodal curve with a maximum sensitivity at the far focus and a second peak at the near focus, corresponding to about +3 diopters in the spectacle plane. The maximum sensitivity of the multifocal group was 0.14 log units lower than the control group (PA.05). In the near region, the contrast sensitivity of the multifocal patients exceeded that of the control group from + 2 diopters and inward. No difference in distance visual acuity was found with high contrast letters. With intermediate contrast letters, the visual acuity of the multifocal patients was lower than that of the control group (PA.05).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that consistent edge detection can be achieved in unevenly illuminated visible-band images if edge detection algorithms are formulated to respond to contrast rather than absolute brightness values.



Patent
24 Sep 1990
TL;DR: In this paper, a method for optimizing the contrast and the angle of view of a liquid crystal display is presented, which consists in periodically energizing a given zone of the display, permanently measuring the luminance of this zone so as to obtain at all times a pair of values corresponding respectively to the luminances of the zone in the energized state and to the lumen in the de-energized state, determining the contrast from the values of each of said pairs each of the measured luminance values and adjusting the control voltage of the cell display as a function of the
Abstract: A method is provided for optimizing the contrast and the angle of view of a liquid crystal display, this method consisting in periodically energizing a given zone of the display, permanently measuring the luminance of this zone so as to obtain at all times a pair of values corresponding respectively to the luminance of the zone in the energized state and to the luminance of the zone in the de-energized state, determining the contrast from the values of each of said pairs each of the measured luminance values and adjusting the control voltage of the cell display as a function of the contrast thus defined.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1990-Eye
TL;DR: Pupillary measurements suggested that these effects were not due to drug-induced changes in pupil size, and the results are discussed in terms of the functional role of dopamine in the retina, and a possible application in therapy for amblyopia.
Abstract: Contrast thresholds for, and contrast matches between, stationary gratings of three spatial frequencies (0.5, 2, and 8 c/deg) were measured on eight subjects with a history of schizophrenia, just before, and again two to three days after, a therapeutic injection of depot neuroleptic. The drug enhanced sensitivity at the low, and reduced it at the medium and high spatial frequency. After injection, subjects required more contrast to match the apparent contrast of the high, and less contrast to match that of the low, to that of the medium spatial frequency. Pupillary measurements suggested that these effects were not due to drug-induced changes in pupil size. The results are discussed in terms of the functional role of dopamine in the retina, and a possible application in therapy for amblyopia.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The subjective evaluation method has the same validity as the performance index in assessing VDT display quality in assessing the effects of VDT luminance contrast and screen luminance on the operator's visual performance.
Abstract: There are interactions in the effects of VDT luminance contrast and screen luminance on the operator's visual performance. The range of both optimal and proper contrast is the function of the level of background luminance on the screen. Increasing screen luminance results in a shift from optimal and proper contrast towards low contrast. The subjective evaluation method has the same validity as the performance index in assessing VDT display quality.