1 / 44

Basics of Stimuli

Basics of Stimuli. John H. Krantz Hanover College. Outline. The nature of the beast Basic Perceptual Issues Spatial Temporal Color Luminance. The General Beast. Screen Mosaic Triad Arrangement. Screen Mosaic Color Strip Arrangement. Interlaced Projection. Progressive Projection.

slevenson
Télécharger la présentation

Basics of Stimuli

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Basics of Stimuli John H. Krantz Hanover College

  2. Outline • The nature of the beast • Basic Perceptual Issues • Spatial • Temporal • Color • Luminance

  3. The General Beast

  4. Screen Mosaic Triad Arrangement

  5. Screen Mosaic Color Strip Arrangement

  6. Interlaced Projection

  7. Progressive Projection

  8. The Electron Beam

  9. Seeing the Flicker If can’t get movie by clicking on the picture, click here.

  10. Spatial Issues Spatial Inhomogeneity Aliasing Edge Effects and Contrast

  11. Spatial Inhomogeneity • The same output value leads to different luminance outputs at different screen locations. • Thus, you get different outputs at different screen locations. • In general, draw to center if critical

  12. CRT % Change from Minimum

  13. How to Handle Spatial Inhomogeneity • Keep stimuli in central region

  14. Aliasing • Technical definition: • When an image contains frequencies beyond the range of the sampling matrix, the wrap-around and occur as lower frequencies, distorting the image

  15. Aliasing • Description of aliasing • Generally try to draw and image that has too fine of detail or sharp edges • Causes “jaggies” • And pixel artifacts • That is you can notice the pixels

  16. Aliasing and Pixel Effects

  17. Craik-Cornsweet

  18. Craik-Cornsweet: Described The figure above is an exaggerated map indicating the light levels across the image on the previous slide. Note how the center and edges have identical luminance. That can be seen by sitting far enough away from the screen

  19. Minimal Contours

  20. Minimal Contours Described There are two circles below. Both circles have the same luminance (intensity level) at the center. Click on your mouse and This one changes abruptly watch as the edges are blurred to the level at the center. and the circle disappears.

  21. Anti-aliasing • Solution to aliasing • Bandlimiting or anti-aliasing • Essentially blur the edges or image so fine detail is lost • In a lot of Software • Ideally use a gaussian filter • This is the shape of CRT electron beam which is why dots on screen never show up • Infante (1985); Silverstein et al. (1990) • Many graphics software and even some languages anti-alias (Java2D)

  22. Temporal Issues Motion reproduction Flicker Stimulus Timing

  23. Motion Reproduction • Frame rates of monitors far exceed what is needed for movement update • NTSC video: 30 updates per second • Movies: 24 updates per second • Most web video 10 to 15 frames/sec

  24. Computer Video • Most Update rates are 10-15 frames/sec 5 fps 10 fps 15 fps Click on pictures to start each of the movies. If that does not work: click here for the left hand movie, click here for the middle, and here for the right.

  25. Flicker • Critical threshold of flicker rates is about 60 Hz in the fovea • But gets higher for larger stimuli • Recommended flicker rates between 66 Hz and 120 Hz (Bridgeman, 1998) • Most monitors are adequate in this value • Notice difference between flicker and frame update rate.

  26. Stimulus Duration • Pixels are not on continuously during a frame • In part this is necessary for clean motion • Typical CRT phosphors last about 4 msec. (Bridgeman, 1998) • On LCD and other technologies, persistence is longer • Makes motion less clean but flicker less noticeable

  27. Differences in Persistence Click on pictures to start movies. If that does not work, click here for the crt and click here for the lcd.

  28. Determining Stimulus Duration • Possible errors: • Not knowing which frame the stimulus is first presented on • Assuming the stimulus is visible from the beginning of the display • Stimuli are not visible at beginning of frame but some time later • Delay depends upon where on frame stimulus is and frame rate • This is a constant error

  29. Effects on Timing • If no more than one frame delay: • Additional error of up to 17msec added to all conditions • No longer msec timing but really 60 Hz timing • If frame delay is larger effects are worse

  30. Example Results from Myors (1999)

  31. Luminance Issues Gamma

  32. Gamma

  33. Gamma Correction • Typically well described by: L=L0+a(V-V0)g • gis typically near 2.3; L, L0, a, g are affected by contrast and brightness settings • Can’t be done on web • Make sure stimuli are not sensitive to distortions in gray scale • High contrast • Photo’s may be distorted slightly and impact results (Ruppertsberg et al., 2001) • Don’t require fine distinctions

  34. Chromatic Issues The Trichromatic Theory Color Picker The Color Gamut Glare Color Blindness

  35. The CIE Color System • A set of Equations that allow predictions of matching. • Used in photo printing, TV and film. • Wyszecki & Stiles(1967)

  36. The Color Gamut • The range of colors reproducible by any system

  37. The Effect of Illuminance on Gamut In Dark With Lights on With Lights on and 30% Luminance Level

  38. Illuminance • Agostini & Bruno (1996) • Accuracy of the perceived stimulus is affected by the amount of illuminance. • D. F. Neri (1990) • Combination of light and gamut changed chromaticity • Request close windows and turn off unnecessary light • Do not use subtle color differences

  39. Color Blindness Description Click on picture to start movie. If that does not work, click here.

  40. Color Blindness Click on picture to start movie. If that does not work, click here.

  41. Color Blindness Click on picture to start movie. If that does not work, click here.

  42. Color Blindness Click on picture to start movie. If that does not work, click here.

  43. How to handle • Screening questions? • Large sample and random assignment • Pre-test on color blind

  44. Summary • Spatial • Aliasing • Edges • Temporal • Frame per second in video • Luminance • Gamma • Color • Glare • Color deficiencies

More Related