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Section II The Human Mind CHAPTER 5 HOW WE SEE CHAPTER 6 HOW WE HEAR CHAPTER 7 HOW WE SEE OBJECTS AND ENERGY CHAPTER8 HOW WE EXPERIENCE INDOOR AND OUTDOOR CLIMATES How We See Eyes sense energy from the outside world in the form of light rays Light rays are converted to nerve impulses which the brain integrates into a visual picture Perceived picture is a subjective modification of what the eye reports – what? Depends on age, experience, attitude, preconceived ideas People differ in their ability to see colors and focus General similarity in human visual sense function allows the development of ergonomic recommendations Our Eyes Continually adjust: to the amount of light they let in To focus on near and far objects To produce continuous images Anatomy Spherical and 2.5 cm in diameter Surrounded by the sclera Light enters the cornea Helps protect the eye and focus light on the retina Our Eyes Pupil in the iris Light then enters the pupil Iris is the colored area Pupillary dilator and sphincter muscles control the amount of light let in Our Eyes The lens focuses Accommodation - increase in curvature of the lens to achieve the greater refraction needed for near vision Normal adult can focus on an object 10 cm away Lens becomes less flexible with aging, less able to accommodate Light rays are refracted as they pass through the vitreous humor to the retina Our Eyes Rods for white/grey/black perception Retina carries about 130 million light sensors Densely collected at the center, the fovea 2 kinds: rods and cones 120 million are rods Contain only 1 pigment Respond to even very low light intensity Electrical impulses travel along the optic nerve to the brain for black and white perception Provide us with the most and most important visual information Our Eyes Cones signal color 10 million cones Majority are in the fovea Each cone contains one pigment it is most sensitive to: blue, green or red If light is intense enough, cones will respond, chemical reaction is triggered, electrical impulse is sent to the brain via the optic nerve Can distinguish 150 color hues Our Eyes Optic nerve Exits eye at the rear, medially offset about 15degrees Area where blood vessels enter and there are no light receptors Optic disk is an area which cannot form an image and is known as the blind spot Our Eyes Visual Control System (Figure 5.2) 1. Adjustment of the lens 2. Focused image on the retina 3. Image information is transmitted along the optic nerve to the brain 4. Nervous control mechanisms provide feedback to readjust the position of the eye, the size of the pupil and adjust the curvature of the lens continually 5. Visual image reaches the conscious area within the brain 6. Initiates command signals that travel through the spinal cord to prompt appropriate actions by the body Seeing the Environment The Visual Field Area in front of the eye in which we are able to see objects Able to discern visual objects with high acuity only if they appear within this area Ex. reading Seeing the Environment Fixated eyes Visual field ranges: Lateral- 90 degrees Medial – 65 degrees Upward – 45 degrees total, 30 degrees color Downward – 70 degrees total, 40 degrees color Seeing the Environment Moving the eyes Several muscles attach to the outside of the eye Rotational movements Pitch – 50 degrees up and down Yaw – 50 degrees left and right Roll Some forward and backward movements occur Seeing the Environment Moving the eyes Peripheral vision is initiated by eye rotation and then replaced by head movement Adjustments in body posture allow eyes to operate close to their resting position Eye tracking Visual targets moving left to right at less than 30 degrees/second or less than 2 hertz Greater rates of movement require eye movements is saccades: lags behind and catches up Seeing the Environment Avoid eye fatigue Excessive demands on extrinsic and intrinsic eye muscles Elderly lenses cannot accommodate well and stiff musculature requires more strain on eye muscles Ex. Computer users Fatigue due to: 1. Poor placement of monitors/visual targets 2. Unsuitable light conditions Proper arrangement of visual targets: In front At a distance in which eyes can easily accommodate Low so we can slightly rotate eyes while keeping the trunk in a comfortable position Seeing the Environment Line of sight When viewing an object in front of us, we adjust 2 angles: the eyes within the head and head against the trunk Line of site (LOS): from the center of the retina through the midpoints of the lens and pupil and then to the target Looking down on the job Ear-eye (EE) line is used to establish a target reference (Figure 5.3) Angle between LOS and EE is the pitch angle of the eye, LOSEE Best around 45 degrees for reading Gets smaller as the object moves farther away Position angle P describes how we hold our head compared to the horizon, P= 15 degrees Seeing the Environment Size of the visual target (Figure 5.4) Expressed as a subtended visual angle, the angle formed at the pupil Magnitude = α Size of the object = L Distance from the eye = D α (in degrees) = 2 x arctan (0.5 x L x Dˉ¹) 1 degree = 60 minutes = 60 x 60 seconds of arc The minimum a human eye can perceive is a visual angle of 1 minute of arc Table 5.1 lists the visual angles of familiar objects Design angles should subtend 15 minutes of arc increasing to 21 minutes at low light levels Seeing the Environment Diopter The reciprocal of the distance of the object in meters, 1/D The optical refraction needed for best focus Table 5.2 shows typical target distances Focusing Accommodation is the ability of the eye to bring objects of varying distances into focus We can only see those objects whose image is clearly focused on the retina Seeing the Environment Incessant changes Lens continuously adjusts its curvature to maintain sharp images on the retina as our gaze moves Ex. Reading – lens oscillates at a rate of 4 times/ second Iris continuously changes pupil size Dilator and sphincter muscles are constantly adjusting the pupil size based on the light conditions Daylight pupil size: 3-5 cm; evening pupil size: 8 cm Emotions and pupil sizes Dilates during strong emotions, i.e. alarm, joy, pain, intense mental concentration Narrows with fatigue and sleepiness Seeing the Environment Overcoming ocular problems Healthy, young eyes can accommodate from infinity to about 10 cm, diopter range form 0 -10 At age 40, minimal diopter range increases to 5 (20 cm) At age 60, minimal diopter range increases to 1 (1 m) Accommodation ability decreases with increasing age as the lens loses water content and stiffens Myopia: convergence in front of the retina, nearsighted Improves with age Hyperopia: convergence behind the retina, farsighted Worsens with age Seeing the Environment More light! The aging eye Pupils shrink with age Vitreous humor yellows Floaters – small clumps of gel suspended in the vitreous humor Visible only when in the line of sight and usually harmless Cataracts – patterns of cloudiness inside the lens Lens may be removed and replaced with an artificial implant Glaucoma – disease of the optic nerve due to increase pressure inside the eye Leading cause of blindness in the U.S. Seeing the Environment Vision deficiencies unrelated to aging Astigmatism Cornea is not uniformly curved Object is not sharply focused on the retina Light rays are either more strongly refracted at the center or the periphery of the field of view Chromatic aberration Eye is hyperopic for long waves (red) and myopic for short waves (blue) Artificial lens solves Night blindness Less than normal vision in dim light Seeing the Environment Color vision deficiencies 8% of the male and 0.5% of the female population Reduced color discrimination Some are missing an element of the cone system and cannot distinguish basic colors Others with color weakness cannot distinguish as many gradations of colors Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions The eye adapts to increases and decreases in illumination Visible wavelength spectrum between 380 – 720 nm (violet to red) Minimal intensity to trigger light perception = 10 photons Minimal illuminance is 0.1 lux, activating only rods >0.1 lux both cones and rods respond Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Unique visual effects of the darkness Autokinetic phenomenon While staring at a single light on a dark background, the light seems to move Night vision deteriorates with decreasing oxygen Vision is reduced at higher altitudes Reduced by 40% in smokers whose blood has lost oxygen carrying capabilities Night myopia When there is a lack of visual contrast, the lens relaxes and focuses at about 1-2 m away, making it hard to see distant objects Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Adaptation to Light and Dark Illumination – the light falling on a surface (lux) Luminance –reflected light (candela/m²) Eye can change its sensitivity through a large range of illumination and luminance Due to pupil adjustments, spatial summation of stimuli and stimulation of rods and cones Full adaptation from light to dark takes 30 minutes Initially cones are more sensitive, eventually becomes rods After adaptation, sensitivity at the fovea is 1/1000th of the periphery – why? Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Adaptation to light and dark Adaptation to darkness depends on cone thresholds Dark blindness – nonfunctional rods Color blindness - cone deficiencies Adaptation to light is very quick During this period, the fovea perceives wavelengths in the yellow region most easily Best to illuminate vehicles with yellowish light at night Allows driver to maintain dark adaptation of the rods to observe events on the road and illuminate the path We adjust faster to red and yellow lights in the dark than blue Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Seeing requires light Some objects generate light, others reflect it Luminance is the most important factor in vision with reflected light The eye adapts to lighting and therefore does not give reliable information on the absolute lighting level Visual Acuity Ability to detect small details and discriminate small objects Depends on: Shape of the object Wavelength, illumination, luminance, contrast and duration of the light stimulus Measured at viewing distances of 6m (20 ft) and 0.4 m (1.3 ft) Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Acuity testing (Figure 5.7) High-contrast patterns are presented to the observer at a fixed distance Snellen letters and Landolt rings are the most common Measures depend on the ability to see the edge differences between the black and white stimuli at high illuminance levels Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Color perception Sunlight contains all visible wavelengths of the spectrum Objects onto which the sun shines absorb some of the radiation Light that we see is what the objects reflect Trichromatic vision The human eye perceives colors stemming from the combination of the three primary colors: red, green and blue Color is an experience Brain classifies different signals from different wavelengths as different colors Psychological experience Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Aesthetics and psychology of colors Perception, interpretation and reaction to colors are highly individual and variable Emotional reactions to color Red, orange, yellow – very warm and stimulating Violet, blue, green – cool, relaxing and clean Varies culturally and regionally Dim and Bright Viewing Conditions Designing illumination Proper vision requires appropriate illuminance Luminance of an object is determined by its incident illuminance Illumination direction and quantity should be carefully selected Special requirements should be noted (elderly require more light) Proper color usage can be helpful but requires sufficient light Summary Eyes provide a large portion of information we need in daily life To see objects we need sufficient light A well lit visual target needs to be at a proper distance to be able to distinguish particulars Eyesight deteriorates as we age and it becomes more important to have proper lighting