What is contrast sensitivity (CS) ?
-is the ability to distinguish differences in luminance (e.g., ‘shades of grey’). Crudely speaking:
-While visual acuity (VA) measures the smallest thing you can see [at 100% contrast]
CS measures the dimmest thing you can see
how is CS measured ?
with Pelli-Robson letter charts. Though other tests exist.
Why is CS important ?
What can CS also be helpful in ?
for screening for people with Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s disease
What can CS be defined as ?
CS is the smallest difference in luminance between a target and a background that a person can detect reliably (e.g., on 90% of trials)
In a high contrast target- there is a large difference in luminance between target and background
In low contrast target- there is a small difference in luminance between target and background
What is CS known as in perimetry/visual field testing ?
Differential Light sensitivity (DLS)
Why is CS different to measures such as in VA?
-because unlike measures relating to stimulus size (e.g VA) contrast is a relative measure: which is the difference in luminance between the target and it surrounding background
What can CS targets be like ?
can have the exact same target
(e.g same spotted light)- can be high or low contrast in another context but same light
- or can have 2 targets of different luminance , that can produce the same level of contrast stimulus
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Why can CS get confusing- ?
because we can sometimes lapse into talking about a target being ‘high contrast’ without any reference to the background. This is often because, by convention, the background luminance is fixed at a particular value for a particular test (e.g., 10 cd/m2 in perimetry).
What is CS ?
luminance difference / luminance average
-depends and varies on the stimulus you are dealing with
When is webers contrast used ?
When is michealson contrast used ?
EQUATION
Difference between Min and Max luminance in image of black and white stripes / average luminance of black and white stripes
What is RMS contrast ?
strange luminance all across the image
What does CS vary with ?
spatial frequencies
What are the CS in relation to spatial frequencies ? (check slide 9)
different spatial frequencies (large bands in low and narrow bands in high)
What is cs in mathematical terms ?
line which maps a set of inputs (spatial frequency) to a set of outputs (CS)- call it the The Contrast Sensitivity Function (CSF)
How is the CSF graph?
What is 1 degree in CSF graph ?
unit of size- width of your small finger nail at arm’s length
What is 1 cycle in CSF graph ?
1 complete black bar + 1 complete white bar
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What is the peak of CSF in healthy adults?
2-4 cpd (cycles per degree)
What does the CSF contain ?
-contains your VA- it is just one point on the CSF
VA is – the smallest thing you can see at maximum contrast- it is in the bottom right of the CSF- where the CSF approaches the x axis-
if you have really good VA it goes more to the right if not then more to the left
slide 12
Why is the CSF an inverted U shape ?
- The envelope of multiple independent spatially-tuned channels
What does a channel mean?
neural circuit responsible for encoiding a certain spatial frequency band- can imagine green dots being photoreceptors – spaced out green spots
What happens if you have a low spatial frequency stimulus?
then might have one receptive field falling on the white path and one of the black etc etc.