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Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds

Temporal changes in illumination are ubiquitous; natural light, for example, varies in color temperature and irradiance throughout the day. Yet little is known about human sensitivity to temporal changes in illumination spectra. Here, we aimed to determine the minimum detectable velocity of chromati...

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Autores principales: Pastilha, Ruben, Gupta, Gaurav, Gross, Naomi, Hurlbert, Anya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7774110/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33372985
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/jov.20.13.18
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author Pastilha, Ruben
Gupta, Gaurav
Gross, Naomi
Hurlbert, Anya
author_facet Pastilha, Ruben
Gupta, Gaurav
Gross, Naomi
Hurlbert, Anya
author_sort Pastilha, Ruben
collection PubMed
description Temporal changes in illumination are ubiquitous; natural light, for example, varies in color temperature and irradiance throughout the day. Yet little is known about human sensitivity to temporal changes in illumination spectra. Here, we aimed to determine the minimum detectable velocity of chromaticity change of daylight metamers in an immersive environment. The main stimulus was a continuous, monotonic change in global illumination chromaticity along the daylight locus in warmer (toward lower correlated color temperatures [CCTs]) or cooler directions, away from an adapting base light (CCT: 13,000 K, 6500 K, 4160 K, or 2000 K). All lights were generated by spectrally tunable overhead lamps as smoothest-possible metamers of the desired chromaticities. Mean detection thresholds (for 22 participants) for a fixed duration of 10 seconds ranged from 15 to 2 CIELUV ΔE units, depending significantly on base light CCT and with a significant interaction between CCT and direction of change. Cool changes become less noticeable for progressively warmer base lights and vice versa. For the two extreme base lights, sensitivity to changes toward neutral is significantly lower than for the opposite direction. The results suggest a “neutral bias” in illumination change discriminability, and that typical temporal changes in daylight chromaticity are likely to be below threshold detectability, at least where there are no concomitant overall illuminance changes. These factors may contribute to perceptual stability of natural scenes and color constancy.
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spelling pubmed-77741102021-01-13 Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds Pastilha, Ruben Gupta, Gaurav Gross, Naomi Hurlbert, Anya J Vis Article Temporal changes in illumination are ubiquitous; natural light, for example, varies in color temperature and irradiance throughout the day. Yet little is known about human sensitivity to temporal changes in illumination spectra. Here, we aimed to determine the minimum detectable velocity of chromaticity change of daylight metamers in an immersive environment. The main stimulus was a continuous, monotonic change in global illumination chromaticity along the daylight locus in warmer (toward lower correlated color temperatures [CCTs]) or cooler directions, away from an adapting base light (CCT: 13,000 K, 6500 K, 4160 K, or 2000 K). All lights were generated by spectrally tunable overhead lamps as smoothest-possible metamers of the desired chromaticities. Mean detection thresholds (for 22 participants) for a fixed duration of 10 seconds ranged from 15 to 2 CIELUV ΔE units, depending significantly on base light CCT and with a significant interaction between CCT and direction of change. Cool changes become less noticeable for progressively warmer base lights and vice versa. For the two extreme base lights, sensitivity to changes toward neutral is significantly lower than for the opposite direction. The results suggest a “neutral bias” in illumination change discriminability, and that typical temporal changes in daylight chromaticity are likely to be below threshold detectability, at least where there are no concomitant overall illuminance changes. These factors may contribute to perceptual stability of natural scenes and color constancy. The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 2020-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7774110/ /pubmed/33372985 http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/jov.20.13.18 Text en Copyright 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Article
Pastilha, Ruben
Gupta, Gaurav
Gross, Naomi
Hurlbert, Anya
Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds
title Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds
title_full Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds
title_fullStr Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds
title_full_unstemmed Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds
title_short Temporal dynamics of daylight perception: Detection thresholds
title_sort temporal dynamics of daylight perception: detection thresholds
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7774110/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33372985
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/jov.20.13.18
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