Title: Optics and Human Vision
1Optics and Human Vision
2Light
- Light
- Particles known as photons
- Act as waves
- Two fundamental properties
- Amplitude
- Wavelength
- Frequency is the inverse of wavelength
- Relationship between wavelength (lambda) and
frequency (f)
Where c speed of light 299,792,458 m / s
3Light
4Light
5Simple Optics
1/S1 1/S2 1/f
M image size / object size S1 / S2
6Optics and f-stop
- Lens aperture is given by f-stop
- Ratio of focal length to the diameter of the area
of opening - Successive halving of the area
7Anatomy of the Human Eye
- Light processing
- Cornea acts as a protective lens that roughly
focuses incoming light - Iris controls the amount of light that enters the
eye - The lens sharply focuses incoming light onto the
retina - Absorbs both infra-red and ultra-violet light
which can damage the lens - The retina is covered by photoreceptors (light
sensors) which measure light
8Anatomy of the Human Eye
Source http//webvision.med.utah.edu/
9Human Eye
10Two Kinds of Photoreceptors
- Rods
- Approximately 100-150 million rods
- Non-uniform distribution across the retina
- Sensitive to low-light levels (scotopic vision)
- Lower resolution
- Cones
- Approximately 6-7 million cones
- Sensitive to higher-light levels (photopic
vision) - High resolution
- Detect color by the use of 3 different kinds of
cones each of which is sensitive to red, green,
or blue frequencies
11Photoreceptor density
12Density of Photoreceptors inthe Human Eye
Source http//webvision.med.utah.edu/
13Comparision
14Illumination and Reflectance
f(x,y) i(x,y)r(x,y) r reflectance i
illumation
15Color and Human Perception
- Chromatic light
- has a color component
- Achromatic light
- has no color component
- has only one property intensity
- Three Related Terms
- radiance total amount of energy emitted from a
source - luminance actual amount of light coming from a
source - brightness perceived amount of light coming
from a source
16Human Visual Perception
- Range of light intensities that can be seen is on
the order of 1010 ranging from the darkest
scotopic threshold to the brightest glare limit - Cant discriminate all these intensities at the
same time! We adjust to an average value and
then discriminate around the average. - Subjective Brightness is a logarithmic function
of the actual light intensity
17Brightness Adaptation
The eye can see over the full range of
intensities between scotopic threshold and the
glare limit, but not at the same time!
18Brightness Adaptation and Mach Banding
Exaggerates intensity changes across edges.
19Brightness Adaptation Revisited
20(No Transcript)
21Simultaneous Contrast
The intensity of the interior rectangle appears
to change as the intensity of the background
changes. Perceived intensity depends on
background information.
22Chromatic Adaptation
The color above is actually GREEN! In the image
to the right, the yellow region from the trick
image was cut and pasted onto the original.
23Stroop Effect(context matters)
ZEWIAAAKS KAKBKEALK IEIEAEPMX KQPPENAEP KEANEEAKT
QKEELKKSS KEJAMEMMT
BLUE RED YELLOW BLACK GRAY GREEN PURPLE
A white box with colored lines of text will
appear. Name the color of each line of
text. See how fast you can identify the colors.
24Shape Contrast
Structural and spatial context influence
perception. Which of the two center circles is
larger?
25PsychoVisual Information
Relative Size As an object shrinks while moving
we interpret it to be further away
Interposition An object that overlaps another is
interpreted as closer to the observer
26PsychoVisual Information
Linear Perspective Parallel lines converge with
distance from the observer
Shading Light is assumed to come from above
27PsychoVisual Information
Binocular Cues Disparity between left-right eyes
gives depth cues.
http//www.purveslab.net/seeforyourself/