The Glare Effect is an illusion in which a white region appears self-luminous when surrounded by linearly decreasing luminance ramps (R). The Glare Effect Test (GET) was constructed as a paper test to easily measure luminosity thresholds within such illusion in different age groups with the following hypotheses: (i) GET can actually measure a perceptual process that changes along the lifespan; (ii) given that older adults present more symptoms of discomfort glare, they should show a lower threshold compared to young adults. Two groups of adults were recruited: young (20–30 years old) and senior (60–75 years old). Participants were assessed with GET and a battery of visual tests: acuity, contrast sensitivity, BHT, Ishihara, and the Navon effect. GET comprised 101 cards in which R changed gradually from solid black (card 0) to full black-to-white ramp (card 100). Subjects were required to classify cards on the basis of those two reference cards. PSEs show no correlation with the other visual tests, revealing a divergent validity. A significant difference between the groups ‘‘young’’ and ‘‘senior’’ was found: contrary to our expectations, luminosity thresholds for ‘‘senior’’ were higher than those for ‘‘young’’, suggesting a non linear relationship between luminosity perception and discomfort glare

The Glare Effect Test (GET): a tool to assess brightness or discomfort glare?

FACCHIN, ALESSIO PIETRO;
2016-01-01

Abstract

The Glare Effect is an illusion in which a white region appears self-luminous when surrounded by linearly decreasing luminance ramps (R). The Glare Effect Test (GET) was constructed as a paper test to easily measure luminosity thresholds within such illusion in different age groups with the following hypotheses: (i) GET can actually measure a perceptual process that changes along the lifespan; (ii) given that older adults present more symptoms of discomfort glare, they should show a lower threshold compared to young adults. Two groups of adults were recruited: young (20–30 years old) and senior (60–75 years old). Participants were assessed with GET and a battery of visual tests: acuity, contrast sensitivity, BHT, Ishihara, and the Navon effect. GET comprised 101 cards in which R changed gradually from solid black (card 0) to full black-to-white ramp (card 100). Subjects were required to classify cards on the basis of those two reference cards. PSEs show no correlation with the other visual tests, revealing a divergent validity. A significant difference between the groups ‘‘young’’ and ‘‘senior’’ was found: contrary to our expectations, luminosity thresholds for ‘‘senior’’ were higher than those for ‘‘young’’, suggesting a non linear relationship between luminosity perception and discomfort glare
2016
galre effect
brightness
discomfort glare
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12606/27138
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
social impact