1,863 research outputs found
Modelling, Measuring and Compensating Color Weak Vision
We use methods from Riemann geometry to investigate transformations between
the color spaces of color-normal and color weak observers. The two main
applications are the simulation of the perception of a color weak observer for
a color normal observer and the compensation of color images in a way that a
color weak observer has approximately the same perception as a color normal
observer. The metrics in the color spaces of interest are characterized with
the help of ellipsoids defined by the just-noticable-differences between color
which are measured with the help of color-matching experiments. The constructed
mappings are isometries of Riemann spaces that preserve the perceived
color-differences for both observers. Among the two approaches to build such an
isometry, we introduce normal coordinates in Riemann spaces as a tool to
construct a global color-weak compensation map. Compared to previously used
methods this method is free from approximation errors due to local
linearizations and it avoids the problem of shifting locations of the origin of
the local coordinate system. We analyse the variations of the Riemann metrics
for different observers obtained from new color matching experiments and
describe three variations of the basic method. The performance of the methods
is evaluated with the help of semantic differential (SD) tests.Comment: Full resolution color pictures are available from the author
Sleep-amount differentially affects fear-processing neural circuitry in pediatric anxiety: A preliminary fMRI investigation.
Insufficient sleep, as well as the incidence of anxiety disorders, both peak during adolescence. While both conditions present perturbations in fear-processing-related neurocircuitry, it is unknown whether these neurofunctional alterations directly link anxiety and compromised sleep in adolescents. Fourteen anxious adolescents (AAs) and 19 healthy adolescents (HAs) were compared on a measure of sleep amount and neural responses to negatively valenced faces during fMRI. Group differences in neural response to negative faces emerged in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and the hippocampus. In both regions, correlation of sleep amount with BOLD activation was positive in AAs, but negative in HAs. Follow-up psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analyses indicated positive connectivity between dACC and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, and between hippocampus and insula. This connectivity was correlated negatively with sleep amount in AAs, but positively in HAs. In conclusion, the presence of clinical anxiety modulated the effects of sleep-amount on neural reactivity to negative faces differently among this group of adolescents, which may contribute to different clinical significance and outcomes of sleep disturbances in healthy adolescents and patients with anxiety disorders
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