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Contrast (vision)

About: Contrast (vision) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10379 publications have been published within this topic receiving 221480 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Quantitative and qualitative results stress the superior performance of the proposed contrast enhancement algorithm against four other widely used contrast enhancement methods; namely, linear and nonlinear unsharp masking, Contrast Limited Adaptive Histogram Equalization and Local Range Modification.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results show an improvement in correlation between measured contrast and observers perceived contrast when the variance of the three color channels separately is used as weighting parameters for local contrast maps, which indicates that further work on contrast measures should account for the global impression of the image while preserving the local information.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There were no group differences on any of the four CSF measures, indicating no differential spatial frequency processing in ASD and no evidence to support the hypothesis that detail-oriented visual perception in individuals with ASD may be a result of differential sensitivities to low versus high spatial frequencies.
Abstract: Adolescents with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and typically developing (TD) controls underwent a rigorous psychophysical assessment that measured contrast sensitivity to seven spatial frequencies (0.5-20 cycles/degree). A contrast sensitivity function (CSF) was then fitted for each participant, from which four measures were obtained: visual acuity, peak spatial frequency, peak contrast sensitivity, and contrast sensitivity at a low spatial frequency. There were no group differences on any of the four CSF measures, indicating no differential spatial frequency processing in ASD. Although it has been suggested that detail-oriented visual perception in individuals with ASD may be a result of differential sensitivities to low versus high spatial frequencies, the current study finds no evidence to support this hypothesis.

74 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: A theory is presented of how global visual interactions between depth, length, lightness, and form percepts can occur and suggests how quantized activity patterns which reflect these visual properties can coherently fill-in, or complete, visually ambiguous regions starting with visually informative data features.
Abstract: A theory is presented of how global visual interactions between depth, length, lightness, and form percepts can occur. The theory suggests how quantized activity patterns which reflect these visual properties can coherently fill-in, or complete, visually ambiguous regions starting with visually informative data features. Phenomena such as the Cornsweet and Craik-O'Brien effects, phantoms and subjective contours, binocular brightness summation, the equidistance tendency, Emmert's law, allelotropia, multiple spatial frequency scaling and edge detection, figure-ground completion, coexistence of depth and binocular rivalry, reflectance rivalry, Fechner's paradox, decrease of threshold contrast with increased number of cycles in a grating pattern, hysteresis, adaptation level tuning, Weber law modulation, shift of sensitivity with background luminance, and the finite capacity of visual short term memory are discussed in terms of a small set of concepts and mechanisms. Limitations of alternative visual theories which depend upon Fourier analysis, Laplacians, zero-crossings, and cooperative depth planes are described. Relationships between monocular and binocular processing of the same visual patterns are noted, and a shift in emphasis from edge and disparity computations toward the characterization of resonant activity-scaling correlations across multiple spatial scales is recommended. This recommendation follows from the theory's distinction between the concept of a structural spatial scale, which is determined by local receptive field properties, and a functional spatial scale, which is defined by the interaction between global properties of a visual scene and the network as a whole. Functional spatial scales, but not structural spatial scales, embody the quantization of network activity that reflects a scene's global visual representation. A functional scale is generated by a filling-in resonant exchange, or FIRE, which can be ignited by an exchange of feedback signals among the binocular cells where monocular patterns are binocularly matched.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Visual evoked potential measurements suggest that similar visual pathways, and with high and low contrast-sensitivity, exist in man and monkey.

74 citations


Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20231,864
20223,760
2021413
2020329
2019354