1 / 32

Visual Display Of Static Information

Visual Display Of Static Information. ANATOMY OF THE HUMAN EYE. The eye is nearly spherical - diameter 20-25 mm It is surrounded by two membranes: Cornea - covers the front surface of the eye Sclera - joins the cornea encloses the eye. CORNEA . The cornea is curved and clear.

tolla
Télécharger la présentation

Visual Display Of Static Information

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. Visual Display Of Static Information Department of Biomedical, Industrial Engineering & Human Factors Engineering

  2. ANATOMY OF THE HUMAN EYE • The eye is nearly spherical - diameter 20-25 mm • It is surrounded by two membranes: • Cornea - covers the front surface of the eye • Sclera - joins the cornea encloses the eye Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  3. CORNEA • The cornea is curved and clear. • Behind the cornea is the anterior chamber containing the nutrient and oxygen liquid, aqueous humor. • The cornea and aqueous humor constitute a strong fixed-focus lens system providing 2/3 of the refractive or focusing power of the eye. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  4. LENS • Under nervous and muscular control. • Contributes to focusing power of the eye. Double convex lens, rear surface curves more sharply than its front surface. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  5. LENS • Behind the lens is a large chamber, filled with thin jelly-like substance, vitreous humor. • Has variable refractive power . Changes shape and thickness through the process of Accommodation, • Permits the eye to remain in focus as distance of objects change. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  6. LENS • What type of focus system is the LENS? • Variable focus Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  7. NEAR AND FARSIGHTED EYE Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  8. LIGHT PASSING THROUGH EYE • Light enters eye at cornea, passes through the pupil, which is the aperture formed by the iris. Light then passes through the lens which focuses the light on the retina. • The light must pass through network of nerve fibers and blood vessels before it reaches the photoreceptors. • The photoreceptors are the RODS and CONES. • The optical image formed on the retina is transduced into nervous impulses then sent to the brain through the optic nerve which joins the retinal at the optic disk. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  9. RODS AND CONES • Photoreceptors of the retina consist of RODS and CONES • Rods are primarily responsible for night vision (scotopic) • Cones are primarily responsible for daylight vision (photopic). • There are approximately 120 million rods. They contain the pigment rhodopsin • Cones mediate color vision. They contain one of three different pigments each of which show maximum light absorption at different wavelengths. 7 million cones. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  10. DENSITY OF RODS AND CONES Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  11. VISUAL ANGLE AND RETINAL SIZE • Visual extent of an object on the retina is discussed in angular units or visual angle. Visual angles represent a constant relationship to retinal distances in a given eye and comparable from one eye to the next. • S = physical size of the object, meters or cm • D = distance of the target object from nodal point (N) of the eye • n = distance from corneal surface to nodal point, approx 7mm Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  12. VISUAL ANGLE AND RETINAL SIZE • For small angles, a simple version is expressed in radians: • Simplified formula introduces some error. At 10 deg the visual angle will be overestimated by 1%; at 17 degree 3%. • VA (minutes) = (3483 x H)/D Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  13. Vision Acuity • Minimum separable acuity – smallest detail that can be discriminated • Minimum perceptual acuity – detect a spot from a background • Vernier Acuity –detect lateral displacement or slight offset of one line from another or it appears as continuous line • Stereoscopic acuity – differentiate image on eye Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  14. Vision Acuity • Contrast Sensitivity • Ability to distinguish gratings as a function of their contrast and frequency. • Modulation (M) = (Lmax - Lmin)/(Lmax + Lmin) Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  15. Conditions Affecting Visual Discrimination • Luminance contrast • Also often called brightness. • Contrast – [(B1-B2)/B1], where • B1 higher luminance of object or surface • B2 lower luminance of object or surface (usually background) • Modulation = (Lmax-Lmin)/(Lmax + Lmin) where, • Lmax is maximum luminance • Lmin is minimum luminance • Time • Acuity improves with increased exposure Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  16. Conditions Affecting Visual Discrimination • Target Motion • Dynamic visual acuity – performance degrades as rate of movement exceeds 60 degrees per second • Age • Visual acuity and contrast sensitivity begin to decrease after 40. • Training • Train subjects to control focus has been shown to improve acuty. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  17. Dark Adaptation • During adaptation the pupil size dilates increases to let in more light. • A chemical reaction occurs in the eye within the rhodopsin (also know as visual purple). • Rods take over. It takes approximately 20 minutes to dark adapt. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  18. Display Features • A. Visual display dimensions • Static versus dynamic • Continuous vs discrete • Coding • Pictorial, numeric etc. • Technology used to transmit information. • B. Units • Minimum discriminable unit (MDU) =required maximum precision for operators task • Number of units required = (range) /MDU Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  19. Display Features • C. In the physical characteristics of visual display units (VDU) • Light reflecting first light emitting • D. large variation in display designs • Shape : linear, circular, semi circular, vertical, horizontal • Fixed pointer, moving scale • Show full or partial scale • Variety of pointer and symbol designs • Scaled and linear, log, etc. units Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  20. Display Features • E. Criteria for evaluating VDUs • Learning speed • Comfort • Absence of fatigue • Small individual differences it with effect • Performance stability • Speedy • Accuracy • F. required properties • Visibility • Distinguishability • Interpretability Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  21. Alphanumeric Displays • A. Criteria • Visibility – separate from surroundings • Legibility – distinguish characters • Readability/interpretability – ability to comprehend • B. Typography (features of alphanumeric characteristics) • Stroke width • thickness to letter height • Black on white 1:6 to 1:8 • White on black 1:8 to 1:10 • Height • Width ratio 3:5 Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  22. Alphanumeric Displays • Font type • Point size • 1 point -= 1/72 inch • Character size • 20-27 minutes of arc • C. Case • D. Layout • Interletterspacing • Interline spacing Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  23. Alphanumeric Displays • E. Hardware Considerations • Refresh rate, jitter, phosphor persistence • Polarity - black on white versus white on black • Color • Use few colors • avoid extremes • chromostereopsis –false sense of depth • maximize color context of text Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  24. Alphanumeric Displays • F. Density • Search time increases with density • Use abbreviations, concise wording, and tables • G. Grouping • meaningful groups of information • H. Complexity • Visual scheme or organization • Using columns Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  25. Alphanumeric Displays • I. Highlighting • To reduce search time • Color, reverse video, blinking • Validity of highlighted material is important • Use blinking for extreme urgency (distracting) Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  26. Graphic Displays • A. Display of text information • Instruction or procedures • Pictorial for speed • Text for accuracy • Multilingual • B. Display of data- graphs • Elements don’t block each other • Scale should show order and range necessary • Visual angle • Contrast • Smallest unit must be visible Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  27. Graphic Displays • C. Symbolic Displays • Pictures • Show immediate meaning without need for recoding • Requires association of symbol to referent • Criteria: • Recognition • Matching • Preferences Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  28. Symbols • A. Symbolic sign is preferable to text if symbol can reliably depict what it is intended to represent (referent). • B. strength of association between symbol and referent depends on • Already established association • Ease of learning • Symbols (codes) need to be - Detectable - Compatible - Standardized - Discriminable - Meaningful Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  29. Symbols • Criteria for Selecting Coding Symbols • Recognition • Matching • Preferences and Opinions • Perceptual Principles • Figure ground (Background remains stable (Necker cube) • Figure Boundaries (solid is best) • Closure (closed figures are better) • Simplicity (keep it simple) • Unity (All parts of symbol should be as unified as possible) Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  30. Coding Dimensions • Single Coding – code on only one dimension • Shape • Size • Luminance (brightness) • Color • Flickering • etc • Multidimensional Coding – code two or more dimensions (more than 2 can slow people down) • Color and shape (purple and square, green and circle) Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  31. Coding Dimensions • Color Coding • Is very good for searching • Can distinguish approximately 9 items (Millers magical number 7 +- 2) • Can be trained to distinguish more Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

  32. Department of Biomedical, Human Factors, & Industrial Engineering

More Related