Literature DB >> 25576380

Visual discomfort and the spatial distribution of Fourier energy.

Olivier Penacchio1, Arnold J Wilkins2.   

Abstract

Quite independently of what they represent, some images provoke discomfort, and even headaches and seizures in susceptible individuals. The visual system has adapted to efficiently process the images it typically experiences, and in nature these images are usually scale-invariant. In this work, we sought to characterize the images responsible for discomfort in terms of their adherence to low-level statistical properties typically seen in natural scenes. It has been conventional to measure scale invariance in terms of the one-dimensional Fourier amplitude spectrum, by averaging amplitude over orientations in the Fourier domain. However, this loses information on the evenness with which information at various orientations is represented. We therefore fitted a two-dimensional surface (regular circular cone 1/f in logarithmic coordinates) to the two-dimensional amplitude spectrum. The extent to which the cone fitted the spectrum explained an average of 18% of the variance in judgments of discomfort from images including rural and urban scenes, works of non-representational art, images of buildings and animals, and images generated from randomly disposed discs of varying contrast and size. Weighting the spectrum prior to fitting the surface to allow for the spatial frequency tuning of contrast sensitivity explained an average of 27% of the variance. Adjusting the shape of the cone to take account of the generally greater energy in horizontal and vertical orientations improved the fit, but only slightly. Taken together, our findings show that a simple measure based on first principles of efficient coding and human visual sensitivity explained more variance than previously published algorithms. The algorithm has a low computational cost and we show that it can identify the images involved in cases that have reached the media because of complaints. We offer the algorithm as a tool for designers rather than as a simulation of the biological processes involved.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Design; Fourier spectrum; Natural images; Scale invariance; Visual discomfort

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25576380     DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2014.12.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vision Res        ISSN: 0042-6989            Impact factor:   1.886


  21 in total

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6.  Implicit Associations With Nature and Urban Environments: Effects of Lower-Level Processed Image Properties.

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8.  Enhanced functional connectivity properties of human brains during in-situ nature experience.

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9.  Pattern glare: the effects of contrast and color.

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Review 10.  A systematic review of controlled trials on visual stress using Intuitive Overlays or the Intuitive Colorimeter.

Authors:  Bruce J W Evans; Peter M Allen
Journal:  J Optom       Date:  2016-07-11
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