Repository logo
 

Spatio-chromatic contrast sensitivity under mesopic and photopic light levels.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Wuerger, Sophie 
Ashraf, Maliha 
Martinovic, Jasna 
Pérez-Ortiz, María 

Abstract

Contrast sensitivity functions (CSFs) characterize the sensitivity of the human visual system at different spatial scales, but little is known as to how contrast sensitivity for achromatic and chromatic stimuli changes from a mesopic to a highly photopic range reflecting outdoor illumination levels. The purpose of our study was to further characterize the CSF by measuring both achromatic and chromatic sensitivities for background luminance levels from 0.02 cd/m2 to 7,000 cd/m2. Stimuli consisted of Gabor patches of different spatial frequencies and angular sizes, varying from 0.125 to 6 cpd, which were displayed on a custom high dynamic range (HDR) display with luminance levels up to 15,000 cd/m2. Contrast sensitivity was measured in three directions in color space, an achromatic direction, an isoluminant "red-green" direction, and an S-cone isolating "yellow-violet" direction, selected to isolate the luminance, L/M-cone opponent, and S-cone opponent pathways, respectively, of the early postreceptoral processing stages. Within each session, observers were fully adapted to the fixed background luminance (0.02, 2, 20, 200, 2,000, or 7,000 cd/m2). Our main finding is that the background luminance has a differential effect on achromatic contrast sensitivity compared to chromatic contrast sensitivity. The achromatic contrast sensitivity increases with higher background luminance up to 200 cd/m2 and then shows a sharp decline when background luminance is increased further. In contrast, the chromatic sensitivity curves do not show a significant sensitivity drop at higher luminance levels. We present a computational luminance-dependent model that predicts the CSF for achromatic and chromatic stimuli of arbitrary size.

Description

Keywords

Adult, Color Perception, Color Vision, Contrast Sensitivity, Female, Humans, Light, Male, Mesopic Vision, Middle Aged, Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells, Spatio-Temporal Analysis, Young Adult

Journal Title

J Vis

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1534-7362
1534-7362

Volume Title

20

Publisher

Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/P007902/1)
European Research Council (725253)