“SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments

<p>We describe a technique that allows control of visual stimuli quality through the use of a setup with a polymer dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) film positioned in the optical pathway of one or both human eyes. Nowadays, PDLC films allow alteration of the resolution and contrast limits of th...

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Main Authors: Olga DANILENKO, Maris OZOLINSH, Varis KARITANS, Paulis PAULINS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kaunas University of Technology 2016-11-01
Series:Medžiagotyra
Subjects:
Online Access:http://matsc.ktu.lt/index.php/MatSc/article/view/12907
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spelling doaj-c77fab89e7174926b2f4cd47067744af2020-11-25T00:47:38ZengKaunas University of TechnologyMedžiagotyra1392-13202029-72892016-11-0122452452910.5755/j01.ms.22.4.129077772“SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research ExperimentsOlga DANILENKO0Maris OZOLINSH1Varis KARITANS2Paulis PAULINS3University of LatviaUniversity of LatviaUniversity of LatviaUniversity of Latvia<p>We describe a technique that allows control of visual stimuli quality through the use of a setup with a polymer dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) film positioned in the optical pathway of one or both human eyes. Nowadays, PDLC films allow alteration of the resolution and contrast limits of the transmitted light due to continuous change in the light scattering that is obtained by the application of an AC electrical field. In our experimental setup, the use of a wide-aperture up to area of 20 x 15 cm<sup>2</sup> PDLC sheet is combined with a flat-screen PC display or with a modified display emission block without its interference filter unit and with an installed individually controllable colored light-emitting diode (LED) backlight. In the latter case, the spatial structure of visual stimulus remains constant, but the PDLC switching-on timing for intensity, color, and contrast of visual stimuli control is done by a PC via an <em>Arduino</em> USB interface. <em>Arduino</em> applies a voltage to the backlight colored LEDs and the low voltage up to 30 – 80 V to light-scattering PDLC sheet. Modifications to this setup can improve the resolution of the timing and screen stimulus intensity and color purity, and increase the flexibility of its application in visual research tasks. A particular use of PDLC scattering sheets involves the altering of the stimuli input strength of the eye in different binocular viewing schemes. In such applications, a restricted-optical-aperture PDLC element is mounted in a goggle frame, and the element is controlled by the application of low-voltage AC field. The efficacy of the setup is demonstrated in experiments of human vision contrast sensitivity adaptation studies. Studies allow to determine the characteristic time of the contrast sensitivity altering of 4 s during adaptation phase and the same order of the characteristic time during recovery.</p><p>DOI: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.ms.22.4.12907">http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.ms.22.4.12907</a></p>http://matsc.ktu.lt/index.php/MatSc/article/view/12907LED monitors, Arduino interfaces, polymer disperse liquid crystals, light scattering, visual perception
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olga DANILENKO
Maris OZOLINSH
Varis KARITANS
Paulis PAULINS
spellingShingle Olga DANILENKO
Maris OZOLINSH
Varis KARITANS
Paulis PAULINS
“SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments
Medžiagotyra
LED monitors, Arduino interfaces, polymer disperse liquid crystals, light scattering, visual perception
author_facet Olga DANILENKO
Maris OZOLINSH
Varis KARITANS
Paulis PAULINS
author_sort Olga DANILENKO
title “SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments
title_short “SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments
title_full “SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments
title_fullStr “SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments
title_full_unstemmed “SmartGlass” Obstacles for Dynamic Inducing of Light Scattering in Vision Research Experiments
title_sort “smartglass” obstacles for dynamic inducing of light scattering in vision research experiments
publisher Kaunas University of Technology
series Medžiagotyra
issn 1392-1320
2029-7289
publishDate 2016-11-01
description <p>We describe a technique that allows control of visual stimuli quality through the use of a setup with a polymer dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) film positioned in the optical pathway of one or both human eyes. Nowadays, PDLC films allow alteration of the resolution and contrast limits of the transmitted light due to continuous change in the light scattering that is obtained by the application of an AC electrical field. In our experimental setup, the use of a wide-aperture up to area of 20 x 15 cm<sup>2</sup> PDLC sheet is combined with a flat-screen PC display or with a modified display emission block without its interference filter unit and with an installed individually controllable colored light-emitting diode (LED) backlight. In the latter case, the spatial structure of visual stimulus remains constant, but the PDLC switching-on timing for intensity, color, and contrast of visual stimuli control is done by a PC via an <em>Arduino</em> USB interface. <em>Arduino</em> applies a voltage to the backlight colored LEDs and the low voltage up to 30 – 80 V to light-scattering PDLC sheet. Modifications to this setup can improve the resolution of the timing and screen stimulus intensity and color purity, and increase the flexibility of its application in visual research tasks. A particular use of PDLC scattering sheets involves the altering of the stimuli input strength of the eye in different binocular viewing schemes. In such applications, a restricted-optical-aperture PDLC element is mounted in a goggle frame, and the element is controlled by the application of low-voltage AC field. The efficacy of the setup is demonstrated in experiments of human vision contrast sensitivity adaptation studies. Studies allow to determine the characteristic time of the contrast sensitivity altering of 4 s during adaptation phase and the same order of the characteristic time during recovery.</p><p>DOI: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.ms.22.4.12907">http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.ms.22.4.12907</a></p>
topic LED monitors, Arduino interfaces, polymer disperse liquid crystals, light scattering, visual perception
url http://matsc.ktu.lt/index.php/MatSc/article/view/12907
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