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OPTOMETRY REVIEW 1 On the cause of disability glare and its dependence on glare angle, age and ocular pigmentation Clin Exp Optom 2003; 86: 6: 363-370 Johannes J Vos PhD TNO Human Factors, Emeritus Soesterberg, The Netherlands Submitted: 17 March 2003 Accepted for publication: 19June 2003 Background In the 1920s and 1930s, disability glare was a topic of great interest in the Commission Internationale de 1’Eclairage (CIE). The Second World War prevented agreement being reached on a standard to quantify disability glare but the Stiles-Holladay formula was widely accepted as such. In 1983, CIE started a new effort to develop a CIE standard making use of research data published in the post-war years. Methods: A committee was formed that agreed that new data and insights justified an extension of the angular domain of a disability glare formula and allowed introduction of an age factor and allowance for ocular pigmentation. Results Three disability glare equations were formulated, each for an appropriately restricted angular domain. The most general, the CIE General Disability Glare equation, covers the full angular range between 0.1 degrees and 100 degrees but for optometrists the CIE Age-adjusted Stiles-Holladay Disability Glare equation, with validity domain between one degree and 30 degrees, will often suffice. Conclusions: Disability glare is due to intraocular scatter and obeys, in the one-degree to 30degree angular domain, albeit with great individual spread, the Age-adjusted StilesHolladay equation: (Lveil /Eglare )Ageadjusted Sulce-Holladay = 10 (1 t [Age/70]*) .1/e2.Quantitative examples are given of the manifestation of disability glare, particularly in traffic. Key words: age, disability glare, drivers’ vision, ocular scatter, the older driver When there is a strong light source in the field of view, it appears as though a veil of light has been thrown over the world outside. Close to the light source, we may be almost completelyblinded but further away, visual performance can also be notably hampered. This experience, well known to drivers, is usually called glare or, to be more precise, disability glare. Disability glare is the subject of this review paper. There are other types of glare-discomfort glare and dazzling glare-that are of a different nature. Discomfort glare is the visual annoyance produced by distraction due to light sources off the line of sight, while dazzling glare is the hindrance of vision by very bright visual scenes such as a sunny beach, presumably due to pupillary spasm by overcontraction. These other types of glare will not be considered as they are outside the scope of this review. The stimulus for this survey is the publication of the CIE report Number 146CIE equations for disability glare,’ which rounds off almost a century of scientific discussion and research on this subject. That report is a dry summary of results, while this review has a more personal Clinical and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 363 touch as it concludes a history of my own involvement stretching over many decades. It sets out to describe how we came to understand the nature and cause of disability glare and how more recent work has allowed us to develop improved equations to quantify it. Optometrists are concerned with disability glare because older patients frequently complain about glare. These complaints arise because the scatter of light by the eye increases with age. The recent work of our CIE committee has enabled us to quantify the age dependency of disability glare. Disability glare Vos This is the second review I have written in connection with the appearance of that CIE report. The first, Reflections on Glare,2was written for illuminating engineers who are interested in the new CIE formulas and their application to the design of lighting. Optometrists and ophthalmologists are the other main group concerned with the subject but their concern is more to understand the visual handicap of disability glare, particularly how it increases with age. HISTORY UNTIL 1965 The phenomenon of (disability) glare has been known since time immemorial but the origin of the masking light veil became the subject of scientific interest only in the early 19th century. GoetheSdevotes some pages to subjective halos in his Farbenlehre and explains them in terms of a 'conflict between mover and moved', like a stone (mover) thrown in the water (moved) causes a wreath of waves that spreads over the surface. In a free translation in modern terms, this could read: in the nervous system of the retina, the stimulus of the bright light causes a disturbance that, like waves on the water, spreads in all directions, gradually fading away. With this in mind, Goethe can be regarded as the first in a long row of investigators who thought of glare as an essentially nervous process. In contrast, 13 years later, Purkinje4 emphatically ascribed the veiling appearance to scattering in the ocular media. Neither Goethe nor Purkinje did experiments to support their statements but by mentioning their names, we recognise that they were among the first to observe and describe the phenomenon that we now call disability glare. As a starting point for further scientific research, one can best consider a paper written in 1852 by Helmholtz5 in which more or less casually, he mentions two possibilities: a nervous and a physical explanation. According to Helmholtz, scattering processes certainly occur and only further investigationswould show the role that nervous processes might play. It took about 70 years before substantial experimental investigations really got started, thanks to the development of the so-called equivalent background technique by Cobb,6 in 1911. The masking effect on the visibility of objects was compared with the masking effect on the same objects by a veiling background and hence, disability glare could be quantified. Of the many investigators who used this technique, we mention only the p i e neers H~lladay,~," Stilesg and later Stiles and Crawford.'O Their combined results were brought by Stiles" to the 1939 CIE meeting in Scheveningen and resulted in the now almost classic Stiles-Holladay disability glare formula for a point glare source: with LWthe equivalent veiling.background, now in cd/m2; Eglmthe illuminance at the eye by the glare source, now in lux; and 8 the angular distance between the line of sight and the glare source, in degrees. For extended glare sources, this formula should be integrated over the angular aperture of the glare source. This formula has since been widely used, even though-probably due to the outbreak of the Second World War-it was never officially adopted by the CIE. Undoubtedly, it derived its success from its astonishing simplicity and transparency. Its most obvious feature is the proportionality between Legand Eglm,which cannot be read other than as a clear sign that disability glare is an optical phenomenon due to light scattering in the eye media and not a result of some neural process. Nevertheless, this obvious interpretation did not win a clear victory for three reasons: some investigators reported small but not insignificant deviations from strict proportionality, leaving some room for doubt the discovery of inhibitive neural networks in the retina,I2which gave some support to a Goethe-style interpretation'%" theoretical workI5J6on ocular light scatter did not manage to produce a satisfactory explanation of the 1/02 angular dependency. The situation changed when carefully controlled experiments,17in which the influences of variations in pupil size and of eye movements were eliminated, provided no indication of deviations from proportionality between Leg and Eglareover five intensity decades. Even more important were our analytic experiments, in which we produced direct and quantitative evidence on the amount of forward light scatter in the cornea, crystalline lens and ocular fundus and that these three components together could satisfactorily explain all of Leq according to the StilesHolladay equation. The idea that cornea, lens and fundus would be the main sources of stray light is hardly surprising. That we can examine the cornea and lens with the slitlamp technique (Figure la) is due to their light back scattering properties. In contrast, the eye chambers and to a lesser degree the vitreous are optically virtually empty. In a similar way, we can examine the ocular fundus by ophthalmoscopy due to the light it scatters back (Figure lb). One should be careful though when drawing quantitative conclusions about the scattering properties towards the retina, because forward scatter is only loosely related to back scatter and depends heavily on particle size and refractive index. Therefore, a more direct determination of the forward scatter components of disability glare was welcome. The cornea is unique in the sense that it is the only contribuent that lies in front of the iris. Therefore, corneal share should be distinguishable by the shadow of the iris it casts on the retina. Normally, we do not observe this shadow because, with a fully exposed cornea the penumbra is expanded and the transition to the deep shadow is very gradual. Moreover, it has to be observed in the far periphery of the field of view and that is difficult. Therefore, we enhanced the visibility of the iris shadow on the retina by using a very narrow glare beam that projects a sharp shadow of the iris (Figure 2) and by making small eye movements enhancing the peripheral visibility. It proved to be possible not only to make the iris shadow visible but also to quantify the luminance jump by photometry,I8that is, by equating Clinical and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 364 Disability glare Vos Figure la. Obvious sources of entoptic stray light: the cornea and Figure lb. Obvious sources of entoptic stray light: the ocular fundus in ophthalmoscopy (courtesy: Lighting Research and Technology) crystalline lens as photographed by slitlamp technique centric \\ Image of the /// Figure 2. Narrowing and polarising the glare beam produces a Figure 3. Changing the pupil entrance of the glare beam from sharp iris shadow and makes the fundus component of entoptic scattervisible due to its brush structure (courtesy: LightingResearch centric to eccentric changes the angle of incidence of the stray light from the anterior eye media but not that from the fundus (courtesy:Lighting Research and Technology) and Technology) it to an ectoptic artificial luminancejump. The corneal share turned out to be about 30 per cent of the total glare veil, virtually independent of the glare angle. The fundus component has a special characteristic: it consists of sideward scattered light against virtually forward components for the cornea and lens. Scatter theory teaches that this sideward scatter should be highly polarised, just like sideward scatter of sunlight by the sky. If so, one should expect a brush-like halo when the glare beam is polarised (Figure 2). As a matter of fact this happens but again, the graduality of the transition between darker and brighter parts of the brushes makes its observation difficult. This handicap could be overcome by slowly rotating Clinical and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 365 the plane of polarisation, which causes the brush pattern to rotate. Again, it proved possible to measureIg the luminance modulation by photometry. The result was that the fundus makes up about 40 per cent of the total glare veil. We should add that this 40 per cent is approximately halved, when it comes to scattering from the fovea towards the periphery. The most Disability glare Vos obvious explanation of this is the thinning of the retina in the foveal region: the foveal pit. It tells us that the fundus scattering is at least partly due to the scattering in the microscopic neural structures of the retina and not solely to scattering in the deeper lying retinal pigment sheet and choroid. There is a third way to distinguish between the components of entoptic light scatter and that is by making use of the Stiles-Crawfordeffect, that light entering the eye via the centre of the pupil is about five times more effective than light entering via the border of the pupil. It is due to made narrow, as described above, we can vary the location of the entrance of the glare beam through the pupil and, consequently, the angle of incidence of the stray light on the retina. This holds for the stray light evoked in cornea and lens but not for that coming from the image of the glare source at the fundus (Figure 3). If all stray light comes from cornea and lens, we would expect a reduction of the glare veil by the full factor five, and if all stray light stems from the fundus, we would expect no reduction at all. As could be expected on the basis of the just mentioned experiments, the experimentz0 yielded a reduction somewhere in the middle, pointing to a share from cornea and lens together of about 60 per cent in the veiling luminance. The picture that emerges from these three experiments is clear: the masking effect in disability glare is typically an optical effect, and the contributions of the cornea, lens and fundus to the stray light veil are roughly equal; roughly, because these experiments could not claim two digits of precision. Moreover, most of them were done for only one subject, myself, then in my early 30s. It would have been interesting to have these experiments repeated with other subjects of other ages. Curiously, these experiments marked the end of virtually all stray light versus inhibition discussions and apparently nobody has felt the need to repeat these experiments or even to refer to them. - + 4.0 2.0 -+ 1.0 - L s0 a, 0 Q: ' 0.5 t+ I I I I I I I Figure 4. The age dependence of the coefficient k in the Stiles-Holladay equation according to measurements of JJspeert and colleagues*'(courtesy: Lighting Research and Technology) 1" 10" 1' lo' 1" 10" loo" 8 Generalised full range glare equation llllll experimental spread 6 -x k "E 4 B -e! urn 2 h .3 v 0 -0 0 green-blue eyes, 80 y light blue eyes, 35 y brown eyes, 35 y nonCaucasian, 35 y -2 -4 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 log %egr Figure 5. The full range angular dependence of Ld/Em for four subjects of different age and eye colour (courtesy: Lighting Research and Technology) Clinical and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 366 Disability glare Vos DEVELOPMENTS SINCE 1965 This was roughly the situation when CIE asked me to head a committee to update the old and widely used Stiles-Holladay equation. We could safely leave behind us the stray light versus neural inhibition discussion and concentrate on two main issues: the influence of age (most subjects, so far, were young adults) and the extension to a wider angular range than the approximately one-degree to 30-degree domain, for which the Stiles-Holladay equation was well verified. Good luck was with us as, after a few decades of little research interest in glare, new investigations were underway that could provide the required new data. In particular, I should mention the Amsterdam research group headed by Van den Berg, which provided new data on three aspects: age dependence, dependence on ocular pigmentation and angular dependency in the larger glare angle domain. That disability glare increases with age had been known for a long time but reliable data on its age dependency were scarce. The data obtained by the Amsterdam group could fill that gap (Figure 4). These data, determined for the glare angle range between three degrees and 25 degrees, show a distinct average age dependency that can be welldescribed by an age multiplication factor: AF = 1 + (Age/70)4 One should add that the data show a very sizable individual spread that, from our point of view, was like a blessing in disguise, because this spread obviated all hairsplitting on details of the postulated u p dating of the original Stiles-Holladay disability glare formula. As for the glare angle dependency, it was evident from the onset that the 1/02 decrease in disability glare could apply to neither very small nor very large angles. For 8 approaching zero, when the target is in the direct neighbourhood of the glare source, the glare veil should coincide with what is normally called the point spread function. Instead of going to infinity according 1/V, the relation should flatten off towards a maximum at 8 = 0 degrees. Fortunately, reliable point spread data were available. However, these data are confined to a very small angular distance of a few minutes of arc. For the angular range between the point spread domain and the conventional glare range-say between one degree and 30 degrees-useful data could be obtained from colour contrast experiments,22in which ocular stray light happens to act as an artifact. I n the conventional glare angle region, there is clear evidence from the body of experimental data that the 1/02 angular dependency becomes about l/8’ around one degree. A reasoning similar to that for the very small glare angle domain applies to the opposite, very large angle scatter direction, when the glare source appears in the far periphery of the field of view. The main body of this peripheral stray light was attributed by Van den Berg, IJspeert and WaardZ3to the diffuse transmittance of the anterior parts of the ocular wall, the iris and sclera. One particular aspect of this is that large angle glare is substantially stronger in lightly pigmented eyes than in dark eyes. As a matter of fact, the new data obtained in the population study of the Amsterdam group provided evidence of a less steep angular dependence, from about 30 degrees. One can say that the Stiles-Holladay 1/e2 approach is nothing but a good average in the middle of the glare angle domain. All these new data, together with theoretical considerations on ocular scatter, provided sufficiently reliable evidence to construct an extension of the StilesHolladay equation over the full zero- to 1OOdegreeangular range.24Moreover, the data obtained by the Amsterdam group on the influence of age and ocular pigmentation enabled the inclusion of those effects in that extended Stiles-Holladay course (Figure 5). It is worthwhile to pause here to study Figure 5 in more detail. First, it shows, as a hatched slanting bar, the range of the experimental data in the Amsterdam2’ study on 129 subjects, varying in age between 20 and 80 years. For comparison, it Clinical and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 367 shows as a thin straight line, the StilesHolladay equation, here drawn over a much wider angular range than was s u p posed to be valid. It approximately coincides, as it should, with the lower border of the hatched bar and markedly deviates from the 1/e2 Stiles-Holladay slope, for small and for large glare angles. Next, there are four partly-overlapping curves, which are the result of our new analysis. Three of them are for 35-year-olds with three levels of eye pigmentation. They really fan out only in the large angle range, where the lightest eyes have the highest position, that is, most disability glare. Finally, there is one curve for an 80-yearold, which is typically characterised by a higher glare level beyond about one degree but at the cost of a relative lowering of the curve in the point spread domain. In view of these general features, it was not too difficult to express their course in mathematical form, just to enable illuminating engineers to easily perform their calculationson glare in a manifold of lighting situations, such as interior lighting, roadway lighting or tunnel entrance lighting. CIE adopted the proposal of our committee’ to define three disability glare equations, each of them valid in a special glare angle domain. The most general version, the CIE General Disability Glare Equation, valid in the glare angle domain 0.1 degrees < 0 < 100 degrees, reads: in which 8 is in degrees, Lvei,in cd/m2 and Eglarein lux. Note the switch from Leg in Equation (1) to LVeilin Equation (3), reflecting the new insight that the veil is more than a computational entity and is a light veil due to entoptic scatter. One easily recognises in Equation (3) the indicated features, such as the increased steep ness on 8 at small angles, the age dependency in the middle angular region and the dependence on ocular pigmentation, p (ranging from p = 0 for black eyes to p = 1.2 for very light eyes) at very large glare angles. Note that we left out the Disability glare Vos Nominal Nominal detection breaking distance time Young adults 64 m 2.3 sec 83 years old 45 m 1.6 sec ------I * 70 years old 52 m 1.9 sec - R d Figure 6. lhffic situation with two motor bikes on approaching courses. Can the left rider detect the obstacle (for example, a pedestrian) when he is blinded by the undipped headlight of the oncoming rider? Table 1. Nominal detection distance and braking time for a crossing pedestrian,while blinded by an undipped approaching motorbike region 8 less than 0.1 degrees, which is the typical point spread region and therefore highly dependent on pupil size. Equation (3) is unnecessary complex for most purposes and was simplified to the CIE Small Angle Disability Glare Equation: with I the headlight intensity, EglWe = I/Rz and the luminance of the traffk obstacle to be seen, we obtain Lobst=p I/Dz when p is the reflection factor of the obstacle, say the pedestrian's raincoat. Now the contrast C by which the obstacle stands out against the veiling glare luminance is: (LVd/Eglare)rmdl angle + = 10/Bs+ (5/02).(1 [Age/62.5I4) (4) valid in the restricted angular range 0.1 degrees < 8 < 30 degrees, which therefore could leave out the terms with the ocular pigmentation factor p. As optometrists will seldom be confronted with sight problems due to glare below one degree, a third equation was presented, called the CIE Age-Adjusted Stiles-HolladayDisability Glare Equation: [Lveil/Eglare = Ageadjusted StilcsHolladay lO(1 + [Age/70]4).l/8z (5) which is valid in the conventional glare angle domain between one degree and 30 degrees. One easily recognises the old Stiles-Holladay equation, now complemented by the age factor in Equation (2). For ages under, say, 35 years, the change in the old Stiles-Holladay equation comes down to only six per cent-negligible in view of the spread, even between normal subjects, of the same age. Only beyond 70 years does the effect of age become really significant: a factor of two at 70, a factor of three at 83 years old. That cannot be a big surprise to optometrists,but at least we can now quantlfy the glare handicap of the aged and illuminatingengineers no longer need be tempted to tune their design to the original Stiles-Holladay equation, which is valid only for young adults. These practical consequences are discussed in the next section. In the preceding sections, wavelength as a parameter is not mentioned. The reason is simple: all evidencez5is that glare is independent of wavelength-something that can be understood from the fact that light scattering in the eye is predominantly due to scattering at structures that are large with respect to wavelength. C = Lobst: Lwi1 = p I/D2 : (101/R2.[1+{Age/70141/8d~2) so that P Ddctection GLAREINTRAFFIC I started this paper by introducing glare as a phenomenon well known in traffic. I will now return to that theme, by discussing a few more specific examples. In each of these cases, it will be obvious that the aged driver will be prone to more visual problems than the young driver. The first traffic situation is that of two approaching motorbikes-for simplicity reasons not cars, which have two headlights, one to the driver's left, which would complicate calculations. The light scatter veil in the eye may impede distinguishing obstacles in your own lane such asjoggers or wombats (Figure 6). The glare angle 8, = d/R, with R their mutual distance and d their lateral distance, so €Idegrcea = (180/n) d/R. Further, Clinical and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 368 = d'd 10 C (1 + [Age/70l4) (6) (l8'/') When we substitute not unrealistic values of 25 per cent both for p, the reflection factor of the obstacle to be seen, and for C, the minimum contrast for detection of a small object, and assume a lateral lane distance of five metres, then: Ddetection - 90 d(1 + [Age/70I4) m (7) In this formula we can easily see the influence of age on the detection distance of a traffic obstacle under conditions of glare due to non-dipping headlights: when for young adults the detection distance is 90 metres, it has decreased to 64 metres at age 70 and to 52 metres at age 83. Disability glare Vos Figure 7. Black wall effect for a tunnel entrance contrastingwith a bright sky. Cars in front vanish from sight, when entering the tunnel. shown to be an optical effect due to light scatter, we must add all other types of light scatter to the intraocular light scatter encompassed in the (age-adapted) StilesHolladay formula. The most important sources of extraocular light scatter are a dirty or scratched windshield and the atmosphere. A survey test on realistic values for atmospheric and windshield light scatter indicated that doubling the original Stiles-Holladay coefficient of 10 is normal.27Of course, the atmosphere may be completely transparent and the windscreen may be freshly cleaned and free of scratches but one should introduce a nominal allowance for scattering by the atmosphere and windscreen glass. Substituting this rough estimation of a nominal extraocular scatter component in Equation ( 5 ) leads to: Ddeteelion Figure 8. Providing traffic lights with background shields strongly reduces glare by the surrounding sky Converted to seconds breaking time, this means 3.2 seconds for the young adult, against 2.3 seconds for the 70-year-old and 1.9 seconds for the 83-year-old.Combined with the steadily increasing reaction time with age, these figures may typify the risks of glare for the older driver (Table 1). However, this is not the whole story. First, contrast sensitivity typically decreases with age,26so that the value of C to be substituted in Equation (6) might be even higher for the aged. That is not completely certain because the decrease in contrast sensitivity might be due partly to the increase in ocular scatter already brought into account. Therefore, to avoid being over-pessimistic, we will keep to Equation (6). Then, because disability glare was Clinical.and Experimental Optometry 86.6 November 2003 369 - 90 m d(2+[Age/70I4) (8) which leads to the following revised nominal values for the detection distance and braking time, which are worse (Table 1). The obvious remedy for this problem is dipping the headlights, which means reducing the illuminance in the direction of the driver of the oncoming vehicle without reducing the intensity in the forward direction where obstacles should be detected. The lighting industry has managed to cope reasonably well with this delicate tuning problem although even dipped headlights, in particular with heavily loaded cars, can still be a source of disability glare. A second example concerns tunnel entrance lighting. When a tunnel entrance contrastswith the sky-as is usually the case with river undercrossings-the high sky luminance casts a glare veil over the tunnel entrance, which can easily mask preceding cars that have already entered the relatively dark tunnel. Curiously, the net effect can be that the tunnel entrance, even though it is more luminous (in cd/m2) by the stray light veil, is effectively obscured (which, literally, means darkened) by the contrast with the bright sky and the nonvisibility of objects in the tunnel. The a p proaching driver then views a dark wall Disability glare Vos instead of a tunnel entrance and this black wall illusion may lead to a shock reaction in panicking drivers. As competing with natural outdoor luminances is hardly feasible, the obvious remedy is to provide tunnel entrances with a light-transition zone, in which the admission of sky light is gmdually tempered and that is the way modem tunnels are usually built (Figure 7). The key question is: which entrance light level is needed to avoid the black wall effect? Obviously, the outcome will be higher for aged than for young drivers. We have presented a quantitative analysis of these illumination problems at the 1983 CIE meeting in Amsterdamz7and therefore, will repeat here only the main outcome in terms of the tunnel entrance stray light luminance LcnvMce, expressed as a percentage of the surrounding sky luminance Llty. For a slightly nebulous atmosphere (visual range five kilometres) one can calculate Lenuance = 0.25 L,Qfor young drivers = 0.34 L,kyforthe aged ones. and LenvMce The meaning of these percentages is that they set a criterion for the artificial light level in the tunnel entrance to compensate for the veiling glare light levels and to render the cars in the tunnel visible. Tuning tunnel entrance lighting to the older drivers, rather than to the youngsters, requires about 33 per cent more tunnel entrance lighting. A final example concerns the irradiation of traffic lights by the surrounding bright sky. The mechanism is the same as with the tunnel entrance: light from the surrounding sky is scattered in the eye and veils the object to be seen, in this case the traffic lights. In more extreme situations-usually more readily associated with glare-it may be the setting sun that produces the scatter veil and so completely impedes traffic light recognition. We will not pursue further here the quantitative elaboration and mention only that the best solution here is to mount background shields around the traffic lights (Figure8),according to Dutch lighting standards,**which recommend three times the width of the traffic lights. Wider shields add little. Because the angular width of these background shields at nominal observation distances is in the order of one degree or less, it is the age-independent 1/03 component that dominates Equation (4) and so here correctly reading the traffic sign is not especially an age-related problem. CONCLUSION The main purpose of the CIE study-and of reporting about it in this journal-was to introduce age dependence into the Stiles-Holladay disability glare equation. The age-adapted version, now accepted by CIE as a standard, shows that disability glare rapidly increases beyond the age of 60 years : it doubles around 70 and triples at 83; of course, with large individual variations. Calculations indicate that the visual handicap due to disability glare in traffic and many other situations may be much more pronounced in the aged than in young adults. REFERENCES 1. Commission Internationale de I’Eclairage CIE. CIE equations for disability glare. CIE report #146. Vienna: CIE; 2002. 2. VosJ. 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