Dependence of Temporal Frequency and Chromaticity on the Visibility of the Phantom Array Effect

Xiangzhen Kong, Rens Vogels, Christophe Martinsons, Maria Nilsson Tengelin, Ingrid E.J. Heynderickx

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Abstract

The effect of both temporal frequency and chromaticity on the visibility of the phantom array effect has been reported in literature. However, how the visibility changes with the temporal frequency is not consistently answered yet and, therefore, needs additional measurements. As for the effect of chromaticity, literature describes studies with different luminaires (i.e., with different chromaticities and peak wavelengths) and settings (i.e., different intensities and viewing geometry); as a consequence, it is challenging to compare these results directly. Therefore, we investigate the effect of temporal frequency on the visibility of the phantom array effect again, but with a special interest in how the peak frequency changes with chromaticity. The results of our experiment show a bandpass-shaped sensitivity function for the phantom array effect with a peak at 600 Hz, without significant change as a function of the chromaticities used in our experiment. However, the peak sensitivity value is found to be higher with red light than with green and white light.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 30th CIE SESSION
PublisherCIE
Pages347-356
Number of pages10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Dec 2023
EventThe 30th Quadrennial Session of the CIE (CIE 2023) - Ljubljana, Slovenia
Duration: 18 Sept 202320 Sept 2023
https://slovenia2023.cie.co.at/

Conference

ConferenceThe 30th Quadrennial Session of the CIE (CIE 2023)
Abbreviated titleCIE 2023
Country/TerritorySlovenia
CityLjubljana
Period18/09/2320/09/23
Internet address

Funding

This study was part of the HTI (Human-Technology Interaction) Research Project and was partially supported by the Human-Technology Interaction (HTI) group at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e). In addition, the study was executed within the MetTLM-project (i.e, Metrology for Temporal Light Modulation; 20NRM01) and received funding from the EMPIR (European Metrology Programme for Innovation and Research) programme co-financed by the Participating States and from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.

Keywords

  • Temporal Light Modulation
  • Temporal Light Artefact
  • The Phantom Array Effect
  • Psychophysics
  • Visual Perception
  • Contrast Sensitivity Function

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