Physically-Based Glare Effects for Digital Images
Greg Spencer, Peter S. Shirley, Kurt Zimmerman, Donald P. Greenberg
Proceedings of SIGGRAPH 95, August 1995, pp. 325--334.
Abstract: The physical mechanisms and physiological causes of glare in human vision are reviewed. These mechanisms are scattering in the cornea, lens, and retina, and diffraction in the coherent cell structures on the outer radial areas of the lens. This scattering and diffraction are responsible for the "bloom" and "flare lines" seen around very bright objects. The diffraction effects cause the "lenticular halo." The quantitative models of these glare effects are reviewed, and an algorithm for using these models to add glare effects to digital images is presented. The resulting digital point-spread function is thus psychophysically based and can substantially increase the "perceived" dynamic range of computer simulations containing light sources. Finally, a perceptual test is presented that indicates these added glare effects increase the apparent brightness of light sources in digital images.
Keyword(s): bloom, flare, glare, lenticular halo, vision
BibTeX format:
@inproceedings{Spencer:1995:PGE,
  author = {Greg Spencer and Peter S. Shirley and Kurt Zimmerman and Donald P. Greenberg},
  title = {Physically-Based Glare Effects for Digital Images},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of SIGGRAPH 95},
  pages = {325--334},
  month = aug,
  year = {1995},
}
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