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Glare is a response to light that impedes or impairs task performance. Contour brightness responses depend on a linear retinal receptor density and eye tremors across a contrasting pattern. These include responses that difference, sharpen, band, flicker, separate, or blur the detail we see disability glare . Area brightness responses depend on area densities which include photic reflexes, phototropic eyemovements, flare, to afterimages discomfort glare . Psychophysics relates each perceptual response with a set of physical stimuli. Correlations are modeled in lemmas as sequential systems…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Glare is a response to light that impedes or impairs task performance. Contour brightness responses depend on a linear retinal receptor density and eye tremors across a contrasting pattern. These include responses that difference, sharpen, band, flicker, separate, or blur the detail we see disability glare . Area brightness responses depend on area densities which include photic reflexes, phototropic eyemovements, flare, to afterimages discomfort glare . Psychophysics relates each perceptual response with a set of physical stimuli. Correlations are modeled in lemmas as sequential systems involving the environment, ocular physiology, neural interactions, lateral inhibition, adaptation, eyemovements, to task performance. Systems are in calculus friendly exponential functions rather than the more difficult ones in lighting. Brightness relates to Luminance(power0.2). This process explains many response systems overlooked in research, lighting standards, design and task performance. It is beyond simple discomfort and disability glare. Responses are defined through reference stimuli and assessed by their task role. Do response cues detect, optimize,impede or impair a task?
Autorenporträt
John Halldane has a doctorate relating visual perception to architecture, a science degree in math with physics and a town planning masters from Auckland, NZ. He is an interdisciplinary international consultant, psychophysicist, scientist, professor, lighting engineer, contributor to technical committees and researcher with numerous publications.