Abstract

The effect of flash duration on the exponent of the brightness power function was investigated in the fovea and 20-deg periphery using a method of direct magnitude estimation. The flash duration employed covered a 5-log-unit range between .001 and 100 sec. The results showed that the exponent is clearly time-dependent for both extremes of the duration—that is, very short (.001 to .1 sec) and prolonged (3 to 100 sec) durations—but not for the medium flash durations between .1 and 3 sec. Furthermore, the exponent is a little larger for peripheral viewing than for foveal viewing except for the durations below approximately .03 sec. The systematic change of the exponent as a function of duration is discussed in terms of retinal and postretinal intensity coding functions.

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