pal.csf {pals} | R Documentation |
Show a colormap with a Campbell-Robson Contrast Sensitivity Chart
Description
In a contrast sensitivity figure as drawn by this function, the spatial frequency increases from left to right and the contrast decreases from bottom to top. The bars in the figure appear taller in the middle of the image than at the edges, creating an upside-down "U" shape, which is the "contrast sensitivity function". Your perception of this curve depends on the viewing distance.
Usage
pal.csf(pal, n = 150, main = "")
Arguments
pal |
A continuous colormap function |
n |
The number of colors to display for palette functions. |
main |
Main title. |
Details
What to look for:
1. Are the vertical bands visible across the full vertical axis?
2. Do the vertical bands blur together?
Value
None
Author(s)
Kevin Wright
References
Izumi Ohzawa. Make Your Own Campbell-Robson Contrast Sensitivity Chart. http://ohzawa-lab.bpe.es.osaka-u.ac.jp/ohzawa-lab/izumi/CSF/A_JG_RobsonCSFchart.html
Campbell, F. W. and Robson, J. G. (1968). Application of Fourier analysis to the visibility of gratings. Journal of Physiology, 197: 551-566.
Examples
pal.csf(brewer.greys) # Classic example from psychology
pal.csf(parula)