Helicopter Electro-Optical System Display Requirements: 3. The Effects of CRT Display Size and Luminance on Dark Adaptation of Helicopter Pilots
Abstract
Previous research has indicated that pilots may be able to successfully use a television display of low luminance level as an aid to nighttime nap-of-the-earth helicopter flight. This experiment was conducted to assess the effects of display luminance level and display size on pilots' visual dark adaptation. Brightness matches made by 12 Army helicopter pilots were used to determine the magnitude of the dark-adaptation loss that resulted from viewing a 13-cm and a 26-cm CRT display at relatively bright and dim luminance levels. In the procedure used, one eye was light adapted to the CRT panel display while the other eye remained dark adapted. Then, while the pilots viewed a simulated windscreen display, the luminance setting for the dark-adapted eye was adjusted independently until the display appeared equally bright to both eyes. Windscreen display luminance for the previously light-adapted eye remained fixed at a highlight brightness of 0.01 footlambert (equivalent to full-moon illumination). The larger display was judged to produce the greater dark- adaptation loss, even though the larger display could be successfully used at a lower luminance level. This result might have been due the greater involvement of the peripheral rod retinal receptor cells when pilots made judgments following exposure to the larger light-adapting display. In such a case, selective attenuation of the blue end of the spectral energy output from the CRT phosphor could reduce the magnitude within 1 second after light adaptation to a dim 26-cm television display showed a 67% loss in the apparent brightness of the windscreen display. This is equivalent to flying under one- third full-moon conditions.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 01, 1980
- Accession Number
- ADA088527
Entities
People
- Aaron Hyman
- Paul A. Gade
- Richard M. Johnson
Organizations
- U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences