Supra-threshold control of peripheral LOD
Benjamin Watson, Neff Walker, Larry F. Hodges
In ACM Transactions on Graphics, 23(3), August 2004.
Abstract: Level of detail (LOD) is widely used to control visual feedback in interactive applications. LOD control is typically based on perception at threshold -- the conditions in which a stimulus first becomes perceivable. Yet most LOD manipulations are quite perceivable and occur well above threshold. Moreover, research shows that supra-threshold perception differs drastically from perception at threshold. In that case, should supra-threshold LOD control also differ from LOD control at threshold?In two experiments, we examine supra-threshold LOD control in the visual periphery and find that indeed, it should differ drastically from LOD control at threshold. Specifically, we find that LOD must support a task-dependent level of reliable perceptibility. Above that level, perceptibility of LOD control manipulations should be minimized, and detail contrast is a better predictor of perceptibility than detail size. Below that level, perceptibility must be maximized, and LOD should be improved as eccentricity rises or contrast drops. This directly contradicts prevailing threshold-based LOD control schemes, and strongly suggests a reexamination of LOD control for foveal display.
Keyword(s): human factors, level of detail, perception, peripheral visual sensitivity, supra-threshold visual sensitivity
@article{Watson:2004:SCO,
author = {Benjamin Watson and Neff Walker and Larry F. Hodges},
title = {Supra-threshold control of peripheral LOD},
journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics},
volume = {23},
number = {3},
pages = {750--759},
month = aug,
year = {2004},
}
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