ADVANCED REAR PROJECTION VIEWER(Sanitized)PROJECT #02157)

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7
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RIPPUB
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K
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82
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December 28, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 23, 2012
Sequence Number: 
31
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Publication Date: 
July 13, 1967
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MF
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 ,NP.IC INTERNAL USE ONLY Nor MEMORANDUM FOR: NPIC/TDS/D-935-67 13 Chief, Exploitation Systems Branch, July 1967 DS STAT ATTENTION SUBJECT : Advanced Rear Projection Viewer Project STAT #02157) REFERENCE : RADC Report of NOD-100 Viewer Test, dated 26 June 1967 STAT STAT 1. Reference report was delivered to who brought it to STAT me for info. I have reviewed it and am generally impressed. V 7 2. I suggest the report will be of considerable value to you for guiding monitors' attention in directing pursuit of the viewer. STAT I think it will also provide some help in refining our development object- ives and evaluation procedures for this type of equipment. In that regard, I suggest you advise of the availability and applicability of this report. 3. As a final wrap-up I'd appreciate your arranging for a feed-back comment to RADC in cooperation with when you've had a chance to evaluate the report--say by the middle of Au ust. Attachment: (1) Reference RADC report Deputy Chie Development Staff, TDS Distribution: Original - Addressee 1 - NPIC/TDS/EPS 2 - NPIC/TDS/DS (1 - Chief, SSB) NPIC/TDS/D (13 Jul 67) 2v61 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 STAT STAT ILLEGIBIAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 ) P.-- 7 Z. /7 rvi 1-1 C / Alt.)/ Y 94.75 2453..35 1.00000 12158.72_ _16.12_ 1.69100 , 203.70 35.43 1.6490U 314.0 9.66 1,00000 551.36 16.12 1.69100 1324.37 22.57 1.00000 449.88 12.74 1.69100 948,31 7.62 1.00000 512.82 27.93 1.64900 283.36 12.74 1.69100 1194,42 ?274.00 1,00000 _ _1263,30 11.38 1.72325 462,76 1.30,06 1.56873 362,66 12.44 _1.00000 .200,65 1.9.57 1.56873 946,49 I-21701 '4173.23 ? -883.71 , 82.95 * 92.% 11 02 510.03 / 4 t14 9.7870 198.12 $13.72 4.17 - ?0003u .01261 .01920 .00000 0126 , 1 .00000 . 012 6 1 00000 .01920 .012.61 00000 ? 02563 .00902 .00000 .00902 3.81 1.00000 6,99 1.65160 .01113 2.89 1.00000 .00000 8.80 1.65895 .02325 7,57 1.00000 135.51 ? 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Pictorial representation of 9-mile wide film strip. ccs ml an rn tio thc tra ant Litt thi jilt eq sin tht Pr, itrz sq TA Pc T1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 -ILIMAN FACTORS 3 3 1:00 o? 4 CHARLES AV. SIMON In the moving presentation mode, the imagery was moved steadily across the display in either direction. This mode simulates the near-real time situation in which a reconnaissance vehicle flies above the terrain at a designated rate while the sensor supplies a continuous radar map to the observer via the display. In the static presentation mode, the same imagery was presented to the observer in suc- cessive static steps, one frame at a time. The image remained fixed on the screen for the amount of time required for the same area to move across the screen in the moving presenta- tion mode. Between static presentations, while the imagery was changing to a new frame, a translucent screen moved between the projector and the screen to blur the image without re- ducing the screen brightness to zero. Blurring the image while changing frames prevented the observer from detecting targets during this interval and kept the total observation time equivalent in the two modes. The static mode simulated a near-real time situation in which the information from the sensor is stored until a complete frame has accumulated and is then presented statically to the observer while the next frame is being stored. Display Size. Both a 6-inch and a 12-inch square display were used in the studies. The TABLE 1 Perceptual characteristics of targets. June, 1965-189 image was rear-projected onto a polacoat screen masked to one of the two display sizes. The screen was adjustable so that the entire image filled either display; thus, the scale factor on the 12-inch display was twice that for the same imagery on the 6-inch display while ground coverage remained constant. Average screen brightness was adjusted so that it re- mained constant for either display. Observation Time. Observation time peri- ods were limited to 10, 20, or 40 seconds. For the moving presentation mode, these were the times it took an object to appear on one edge of the display, move across to the other edge and disappear. ' For the static presentation mode, these were the periods of time during which a single frame was exposed. Ground Coverage. The ground area cov- ered by the radar imagery on the display was either 18 or 9 miles square. For a fixed display size, changing ground coverage from 18 to 9 miles square is equivalent to doubling the scale factor while holding display size constant. Target Characteristics. The eight target types were divided into four groups with sim- ilar perceptual characteristics. This grouping served two purposes: (1) to combine enough data for meaningful analysis, and (2) to allow for broader generalizations than would be PERCEPTUAL CHARACTERISTICS TARGET GROUPS 2 3 4 Triangular Airfield Other Airfields (Average) Stadium Tank Far ns (Average) 0 Size Length of Longest Dimension* 3700 ft. 4320 ft. 1080 ft. 1380 ft. Width of Smallest Dimension* 180 ft. 130 ft. 300 ft. 300 ft. Distinctive- ness Brightness Contrast High Low High Medium Target and Background Pattern Similarity Low High High Medium *Dimensions expressed in feet on the ground. 8000 feet on the ground equal approximately one inch on a 12-inch square display for the 18-mile imagery. Atra viewing distance of 12 inches, an inch subtends approximately a 5-degree visual angle from, the eye. At a viewing distance of 18 inches, the visual angle is approximately 3 degrees. These relationships are double for the 9-mile imagery and halved for the 6-inch square display. I. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 190?June, 1965 possible if results were expressed in terms of target class or the specific target patterns used in this study. This classification of targets by perceptual characteristics is shown in Table 1. Relationships Among Variables. Combina- tions of several variables in this experiment can be identified by other familiar classifica- tions (Table 2). For example, combinations of observation time and ground coverage can . be identified with real world vehicular rates over the terrain (Table 2A). Observation time can also be expressed in terms of apparent movement rates, that is, in terms of inches of movement per second when display size is taken into consideration (Table 2B), or in terms of degrees of movement per second when viewing distance is taken into considera- tion (Table 2D). Similarly, various combina- tions of display size and ground coverage re- sult in different image scale factor values (Table 2C). It should be noted that while the observation times expressed in Mach values appear high, when expressed in terms Of degrees of move- ment per second they are considerably below the level at which a degradation in dynamic visual acuity has been observed (Miller and Ludwigh, 1960). .? HUMAN FACTORS PROCEDURE Observers practiced and were tested in a semi-darkened cubical room which served to attenuate external noise and visual distractions. No restrictions were placed upon their seating positions or viewing distance from the display. The practice periods and experimental sessions are described below. I; Practice Period. The practice period served: ti (1) to select only observers proficient in recog- nizing radar targets, (2) to familiarize the ob- servers with radar imagery and with the specific targets used in this study, and (3) to allow them to develop optimum search tech- niques for both the moving and static presen- tation modes. A series of one-half to one-hour practice periods was given to each observer. An ob- server's total practice time was from two to four hours, depending upon his previous ex- perience and ability to reach arbitrary per- formance criteria. Those observers unfamiliar with radar were informed briefly how radar operates and how its pulses reflect from various ground objects to produce the light and dark returns on the display. All were given training in finding targets in radar imagery similar to that to be 1,01 C,! 0' St TABLE 2 Some relationships among observation time, imagery ground coverage, and display size. Observation (A) (B) Real World Rates for Different Imagery Ground Movement on Screen for Different Display Sizes and Coverages and Observation Times Obervation Times. Time, seconds Ground Coverage Display Size 18 x 18 miles 9 x 9 miles 6 x 6 12 x 12 inches inches 10 Mach 10.8 Mach 5.4 0.6 inch /sec 1.2 inch /sec 20 Mach 5.4 Mach 2.7 0.3 inch /sec 0.6 inch /sec 40 Mach 2 . 7 Mach 1.35 1.15 inch/sec 0.3 inch /sec (C) (D) Image Scale Factors Resulting from Combinations of Apparent (Retinal) Movement with a 10-second Ob- Display Size and Ground Coverage servation Time for Different Display Sizes and at Different Viewing Distances Display Size, Inches Ground Coverage Distance from Display 18 x 18 9 x 9 miles miles 6 inches 12 Inches 18 inches 6 x 6 12 x 12 1/216,000 1/108,000 1/108,000 1/54,000 5.3?/sec 2.8?/sec 9.0?/sec 5.3?/sec *20 seconds (by 2); 40 seconds (by X) 1.9? /sec 3.7?/sec it Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 iMAN FACTORS DURE :Ind were tested in a -oom which served to ind visual distractions. -eed upon their seating _ance from the display. experimental sessions ]Iractice period served: 2rs proficient in recog- to familiarize the ob- ;very and with the ids study, and (3) to pptimum search tech- , ing and static presen- to one-hour practice zh observer. An ()b- ale was from two to llon his previous ex- reach arbitrary per- iliar with radar were ar operates and how _rious ground objects dark returns on the training in finding similar to that to be e. .11) ifferent Display Sizes and Nay Size 12 x 12 inches 1. 2 inch /sec 0 . 6 inch /sec 0.3 inch /sec 7) ,it with a 10-seeand Ob- au' Display Sizes and at _s -am Display 2 ' _hes 18 Incites /see 1.9? /sec /sec 3.7?/sec CHARLES W. SIMON used in the experiment. Practice under both static and moving presentation modes was given; near the end of the practice period, the observation times were limited to those the ob- server would experience during the experi- ment. Through these experiences, observers de- veloped their own methods of search and estab- lished viewing distances most suitable for themselves. Instructions. The following points were made during the initial instructions to the sub- jects and were re-emphasized throughout the experiment: 1. Simulated Mission. The following hypo- thetical situation was described to the ob- servers: An intelligence report has been received stating that enemy aircraft are about to take off from certain specified airfields to bomb friendly troops and installations, Also, missile launchers, hidden near certain specified fuel tank farms, are being prepared for immediate launch. An enemy headquarters coordinating these efforts is stationed in a football stadium. It is vital that all these critical targets be found and destroyed as quickly as possible. Every second of delay could be critical, for our reconnaissance plane risks destruction if it is detected before it can detect and destroy the enemy. Furthermore, if the plane is detected, this would serve as a warning for enemy planes to take off and for missiles to be fired. Under these circumstances, it is better to bomb a nontarget than lose a real one. 2. A Priori Information. Observers were also shown small sections of radar imagery in which the targets to be recognized were em- bedded. These targets were the same size and shape as the ones to be recognized, but were not necessarily shown in the same orientation. During a "hot" war, military-type targets would be less likely to be located in logical places and must be searched for everywhere. Thus, observers were told that targets would be located in practically any section of the display and would not appear in a systematic order or with a fixed frequency. 3. Observer's Task. The basic task before each observer was one of target recognition, June, 1965-191 that is, of finding targets on the display essen- tially identical to those shown during the briefing period. As soon as a target was recog- nized, the observer immediately pressed a button and put his finger on the target and named it. The observer was instructed to "get as many targets as quickly as possible, as soon as they appeared on the display." Scoring. When the observer pressed his button, a mark was made on a graphic recorder on which a time base was provided. Locating and naming the target was done quickly and did not appear to disrupt the observer's con- tinuing search. It did enable the experimenter to check the correctness of the response (both target and location) from a scoring chart that he held and marked. If the information was correct, the experimenter also pressed a button which put a verification mark on the graphic record. In addition, a mark was automatically reg- istered on the graphic record for each target after it appeared on the display. Time differ- ences between the automatic target mark and the observer's mark indicated the time required to recognize that target once it appeared on the display. Time was determined to the nearest second. The presence of the observer's mark and the absence of the experimenter's mark enabled the number of false targets to be determined. Experimental Sessions. Before each ex- perimental session, observers were given short practice runs with the imagery, observation time, and display size similar to those used in the experiment. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN The experimental design used in this experi- ment is shown in Table 3. Performance data was collected for all 24 combinations of pres- entation mode, ground coverage, observation time, and display size. Each observer was tested under the four combinations of mode and ground coverage. Different observers were tested under each of the different observa- tion times and display sizes. Thus, six ob- servers,? each tested under four sets of condi- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 192?June, 1965 TABLE 3 Experimental design HUMAN FACTORS CIIARLE Observers Observation Time. (seconds) Display Size (inches) Presentation Mode Moving Static Ground Coverage (miles) 9 x 9 18 x 18 9 x 9 18 x 18 Trials 1 10 6 x 6 3 2 4 1 7 10 6 x 6 4 2 3 2 10 12 x 12 3 2 4 8 10 12 x 12 1 4 2 3 ' 3 20 6 x 6 ? 4 1 3 2 9 20 6 x 6 2 3 1 4 4 20 12 x 12 4 1 3 2 10 20 12 x 12 2 3 ? 1 4 5 40 6 x 6 4 1 3 2 11 40 6 x 6 2 3 1 4 6 40 12 x 12 3 2 4 1 12 40 12 x 12 1 4 2 3 tions, were required for a single replication. Two replications were run. The order in which observers *ere tested on the four presentation mode and ground cover- age combinations was partially counterbal- anced. The order for observers tested under the same conditions of observation times and display size was reversed. Over the entire ex- periment, each of the four conditions run by MOVING PRESENTATION MODE to 16 ii to It 24 24 all subjects appeared the same number of times during each of the four testing sessions. Observers were tested morning and after- noon on two consecutive days. A different combination of mode and ground coverage was tested at each of the four sessions. A session consisted of two runs through the imagery?first forward and then backward, with a rest period in between. The actual STATIC PRESENTATION MODE 14 II ii a 22 24 24 II SO 33 34 00 36 time mitt mile lonj ?licular cd ground cc Results':. presented TABLE 5 Analysis TOTAL AETW (MR', Displ Time Error WITHI l'rese .Grout Tarp Mod, Mod. Grou. Mod. Mod Groc Groc Targ Targ Mod Mod Groi Targ Mod Mod Groi (1 rot Moc Moc Mcic Moc Moc Gro; Moc Moc Errc This a (G. W. Two sc related the cor Only F using tl of the TIME (SECONDS) TIME (SECONDS) 2 DISPLAY SIZE OBSERVATION TIME GROUND COVERAGE 12-0- 10 - 20 - 40 - 9---18 ? 3 INCHES SQUARE SECONDS MILES SQUARE Fig. 4. Cumulative percent of radar targets recognized on moving and static display. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 HUMAN FACTORS CHARLES W. SIMON entalioa Mode time required to run once through the 324- mile long imagery depended upon the par- ticular combination of observation time and ground coverage being studied (Table 4). Static TABLE 4 Actual testing time for one run. June, 1 9 65-1 93 Coverage (miles) 9 x 9 18 x 18 Trials 4 1 2 3 4 2 3 3 2 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 4 1 2 3 the same number of :he four testing sessions. :Led morning and after- itive days. A different and ground coverage t the four sessions. A two runs through the _I and then backward, a between. The actual RESENTATION MODE 1440-1. 40.4 .401 ...411.4044 ? ?BUI4UUMUMMAN (SECONDS) :OVERAGE I 8 - souAnE ind static display. RESULTS Results of the experiment are graphically 9 miles 6 minutes 12 minutes 24 minutes presented in Figure 4. The two plots show the Ground Coverage (width) Observation Time (seconds) 10 20 40 18 miles 3 minutes 6 minutes 12 minutes TABLE 5 Analysis of variance: percentage of targets recognized correctly. Source of Variation Degrees of Freedom Mean Square F. TOTAL 191 BETWEEN SUBJECTS 11 624.39 Observation Time 2 2445.19 10.235 Display Size 1 1725.97 7.225 Time x Display Size 2 7.73 Error uncorr.2 6 .39.42 WITHIN SUBJECTS 180 Presentation Mode 1 3.70 Ground Coverage 1 38844.50 49.785 Target Characteristics 3 13137.88 31.356 Mode x Ground Coverage 1 10.39 Mode x Target 3 39.64 Ground Coverage x Target 3 780.20 10.284 Mode x Time 2 15.96 Mode x Display Size 1 231.04 Ground Coverage x Time 1 16.83 Ground Coverage x Display Size 1 60.76 Target x Time 6 238.66 Target x Display Size 3 344.84 Mode x Ground Coverage x Target 3 20.59 Mode x Time x Display Size 2 32.58 Ground Coverage x Time x Display Size 2 76.44 Target x Time x Display Size 6 238.96 3.154 Mode x Time x Target 6 43.73 Mode x Ground Coverage x Display Size 1 101.13 Ground Coverage x Target x Time 6 133.61 Ground Coverage x Target x Display Size 3 78.72 Mode x Ground Coverage x Time 2 148.89 Mode x Target x Display Size 3 38.10 Mode x Ground Coverage x Target x Time 6 44.27 Mode x Ground Coverage x Display Size 3 141.84 Mode x Ground Coverage x Time x Display Size 6.96 .Ground Coverage x Target x Time x Display Size ,2 6 47.49 Mode x Target x Time x Display Size 6 26.41 Mode x Target x Time x Display Size x Ground Coverage 6 105.82 Error corr.2 90 75.89 This analysis was made on the arcsin transformation of the square root of the percentage data (G. W. Snedecor, Statistical Methods (4th Edition), 1946, Iowa State_College Press, pp. 447-448). 2 TW-6-s-oijrces of variability attributable to chance can be calculated, i.e., that which is based on the uncor- related data obtained from conditions on which different observers were tested and that which is based on the correlated data obtained from conditions on which the same observers were tested. 3 Only F ratios significant at the 0.05 probability level or better are shown. Tests of significance were made by using the mean square of the appropriate error term4 or by using the mean squares (or pooled mean square6) of the significant interactions containing the source of variation being tested. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 194-June, 1965 HUMAN FACTORS / CliAi i TABLE 6.}7 prob.t Analysis of variance: median tinie to recognize targets. each i Source of Variation Degrees of Freedom Afean Square Fa TOTAL 47 18.43 BETWEEN SUBJECTS 11 Time ?2 60.58 Display Size 1 7.14 Timex Display Size 2 4.22 Error uncorr.1 6 3.73 WITI IIN SUBJECTS 36 Mode 1 231.89 10.614 Ground Coverage 1 125.14 Mode x Ground Coverage 1 59.62 Time x Ground Coverage 2 27.25 Display Size x Ground Coverage 1 .41 Mode x Time 2 43.28 Mode x Display Size 1 .03 Time x Display Size x Ground Coverage 2 3.86 Mack x Timex Ground Coverage 2 ,27.26 12.173 Timex Display Size x Mode 2 16.52 7.383 Mode x Display Size x Ground Coverage 1 2.77 Mode x Time x Display Size x Ground Coverage 2 2.44 Error corr.' 18 2.24 time, the al T1-. show 'aria Targ, Med. gets by a the; the aloft Valu etTcc . plott TABL 1 Two sources of variability attributable to chance can be calculated, i.e. that which is based on the uncorrelateeFalsL data obtained from conditions on which different observers were tested and that which is based on the cor- related data obtained from conditions on which the same observers were tested. 2 Only F ratios significant at the .05 probability level or better are shown. Tests of significance were made b) using the mean square of the appropriate error term3 or by using the mean square (or pooled mean square; of the significant interactions containing the sources of variation being tested. TABLE 7 - Analysis of variance: range of es required by an observer to recognize 90 percent of recognizable targets. Source of Variation Degkes of Freedom Mean Square TOTAL BETWEEN SUBJECTS 47 II Time 2 846.33 40.594 Display Size 1 .34 Time x Display Size 2 .58 Error uncorr.1 6 11.58 WITHIN SUBJECTS 36 Mode 1 1365.34 65.494 Ground Coverage 1 60.75 Mode x Ground Coverage 1 33.33 Timex Ground Coverage 2 16.75 Display Size x Ground Coverage 1 3.00 Mode x Time 2 286.33 Mode x Display Size 1 10.07 Time x Display Size x Ground Cover 2 3.25 Mode x Time x Ground Coverage 2 20.85 4.62 Time x Display Size x Mode 2 8.09 Mode x Display Size x Ground Coverage 1 3.25 Mode x Timex Display Size x Ground Coverage 2 2.24 Error corr.' 18 4.51 1 Two sources of variability attributable to chance can be calculated, i.e., that which is based on the uncor? related data obtained from conditions on which different observers were tested and that which is based on the correlated data obtained from conditions on which the same observers were tested. 2 Only F ratios significant at the 0.05 probability level or better are shown. Tests of significance were made by using the mean square of the appropriate error term3 or by using the mean square (or pooled mean square) of the significant interactions4 containing the sources of variation being tested. lo GRO PR DI: CR LOE 7-- ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 -.IAN FACTORS citAitLEs w. straw-sr ''quare FZ _43 58 14 22 73 89 10.614 14 62 25 -11 C3 26 V6 12.173 ? 7.383 77 44 24 =,ed on the uncorrelated. 2.11 is based on thd cor- ificance were made by pooled mean square4) 1 recognizable targets. uare F2 33 40.594 34 58 58 34 65.494 75 33 75 00 33 137 25 .85 4.623 1)9 25 24 ii ; based on the uncor-1 which is based on the :ficance were made by; pooled mean square)i 1 probabilities of target recognition over time for each of the 12 combinations of observation time, display size, and ground coverage for the moving and static presentation modes. The statistical treatment of the data is shown in Tables 5 through. 9. Analyses of variances were calculated on the percentage of Targets ?Recognized Correctly (Table. 5), Median Time for Recognizing Acquired Tar- gets (Table 6), and the Time Ranges Required by an Observer to Recognize 90 Percent of the Targets Acquired (Table 7). Table 8 shows the Frequency of Recognizing False Targets, along with the results of tests of differences. Values for individual means of significant main effects and interactions in these analyses were plotted in the graphs of Figures 5 through 7. TABLE 8 False targets. June, 1965-195 The results of the analyses and data shown on the tables and figures are summarized in Table 9. The effect of each variable on each performance measure is given, and where the interactions among variables were found to be significant, the data has been summarized across variables. In general, it would appear that within the range of conditions in this study, the same number of targets can be found with either the moving or static presentation mode, but that as observation times grow longer and target visi- bility becomes poorer it takes significantly longer and speed of performance is more variable with the static mode. One result of interest is the comparative' effects of the two combinations of display size FREQUENCY OF ACQUIRING FALSE TARGETS FOR DIFFERENT TARGET GROUP PATTERN BACKGROUNDS 1 2 3 4 5 A A i o o I o o I o i?i o o 0 1 0 1 0 :0: 0 0 0 0 6 (?) QD 6 5 6 5 4 X 5 5 13 2 4 It- A 3 5 3 5 0 =-4 3 1 9 7 3 TARGET-DISPLAY-SYSTEM CONDITIONS PRESENTATION MODE : MOVING STATIC DISPLAY SIZE 6 12 6 12 GROUND COVERAGE . 9 18 9 18 9 le 9 le ,i _ TARGET PATTERN [11 k Id@INk.':dHd[): OBSERVATION TIMES r851no1`861`886-LIT,61f6"?.36-1`6"8-alno I 1 0 'a 6 1 I 1 I I I 11 2 I ig ? cA _ 1, I 1 3 I Z 3 I 1 1 6 I 3 2 13 2 12 1 3 2 I 4 1 2 1 2 1 2 I 1 2 1 2 1 I 1 I 1 I I 1 I 1 2 3.3 2 1 5 3 1 1 1 X2 FOR FALSE AR F SOURCE f x2 d. f. SIGNIFICANCE p.5.0.05 SOURCES f x2 SIGNIFICANCE d.f 1350.05 PRESENTATION MODE MOVING STATIC 49 58 0.75 I NO TARGET GROUP. A g) i? 2 II 26 68 62.7 3 YES DISPLAY SIZE 6 INCHES I2INCHE4e 58 49 0.75 I NO GROUND COVERAGE ? SMILES !SMILES 70 37 0.23 I NO BACKGROUNDS ? I la la 1St X le 18 31 22 18 3. 73 4 NO OBSERVATION TIME 1 0 SECONDS 20 SECONDS 40SECONDS 35 21 51 12.6 2 - YES . ?", Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23.: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 196?June, 1965 HUMAN FACTORS C-GROUND COVERAGE B-DISPLAY SIZE A-OBSERVATION TIME g g E.7 8 2 00000000 0o o 0 co P- IDVI If to ca O0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 O 01 CD N W o N 03ZIN0033a S.1.306Y1 O IN3083ci 10 01 0 ID 0 0 NAUTICAL MILES,SQUARE INCHES SQUARE ? 1 I 1 1 I 1 1 1 0 - O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 O co c4- co co PI 0-TARGET GROUPS O 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 o O o.) 10 1 ID VI 4 rn N ? 0 111111111 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0, a) tO nt N 02Z NO033N S.1.30e1V4, JO .IN 33a Fig. 5. Percent* of targets recognized correctly (*transformed back from arcsin transformation used in analysis). CilAi TAM Sum ME NI Ti COV Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 :AN FACTORS _ 7,- 1 1 0 0 0 N 0 0 1 I I 00 N 20 D LN3d xansformation used CHARLES W. SIMON TABLE 9 Summary of results showing effects of variables on performance. June, 1965-197 PERFORMANCE MEASURES VARIABLES' STATIC VERSUS MOVING PRESENTATION MODES GROUND COVERAGE (9 x9 OR 18 x 18 OBSERVATION MILES AND (10, 20, 40 SECONDS) DISPLAY SIZE (6' x 6" OR 12' x 12") TARGET CHARACTERISTICS PERCENTAGE OF TARGETS CORRECTLY RECOGNIZED (TABLE 5) No Effect (Table 5) More targets re- cognized as time increased. (Figure 5A) More targets re- cognized on larger display or with smaller ground area. (Figure 6B and C) Larger and more dis- tinctive targets were more often recognized (Figure 5D) Reducing ground coverage increased re- cognition of targets. Less distinctive targets showed greatest increase. (Figure 5E) Targets with smallest widths were poorer with short observation times and small displays. Targets with longest dimensions im- proved with longer observation times and larger displays. (Figure 6F) MEDIUM TIME TO RECOGNIZE (TABLE 6) Static took longer (Figure 6A) Recognition took longer with smaller displays and greater ground coverage. Differences were significant only when imagery was presented statically and for the longer observa- tion times. (Figure 6 B and C) (No Analysis) MEAN VARIABILITY IN OBSERVER'S RECOGNITION TIMES (TABLE 7) Static more vari- able (Figure 7A) Variability in- creased with longer observation (Figure 7BE) With a static presentation and with a longer observation time, variability was greatest when ground coverage was large. (Figure 7C) No effect due to display size. (Table 6) (No Analysis) No Effect NUMBER OF FALSE (Table 8) TARGETS CALLED (TABLE 8) Significantly fewer false targets with 20-second obser- vation time. (Table 8) Twice as many false targets were called when film coverage was twice as much. (Table 8) Seven times as many false targets were cal- led when target pat- terns were judged more similar to back- ground patterns. (Table 8) Where information extends across more than one variable, it refers to the interaction among the variables covered. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 198?June, 1965 and ground coverage yielding the same scale factor. Both the 9-mile square ground cover- age on the 6-inch display and the 18-mile square coverage on a 12-inch square display represented a scale factor of 1/108,000. On both displays, therefore, targets were of equal size. However, performance was not identical. The results in Table 10 illustrate the difference. Variations in ground coverage had a much greater effect on performance than variations in display size. None of the previously mentioned analyses included an examination of changes in per- formance over the four experimental sessions. The number of targets recognized for each of the four sessions for all subjects under all conditions were: I. 455 II. 453 III. 459 IV. 494 The average times to find and recognize tar- gets for each of the four sessions were: HUMAN FACTORS I. 6.2 secs. II. 6.6 secs. III. 5.9 secs. IV. 6.4 secs. None of the values for either measure differs significantly from what could be expected by chance at the 0.05 probability level. DISCUSSION The present study clearly indicated that for the conditions under investigation, target ac- quisition performance was never better and often poorer when the imagery was presented in a series of static steps than when the imagery was presented in a continuous move- ment across the display. There was no differ- ence between the two presentation modes in the probability of finding targets. However, under many conditions, those targets that were detected were found sooner on the moving MEDIAN TINE TO RECOGNIZ A- PRESENTATION MODE 20 B- 20 la INTERACTION- GROUND COVERAGE, PRESENTATION MODE, AND OBSERVATION TIME 20 18 ie , X STATIC 0 MOVING eX 16 ? 16 14 - 14 9 N. pm, 14 12 - 12 10 - - 10 xi ? ? - 4 - 2 - MOVING STATIC 10 20 30 SECONDS C- INTERACTION- DISPLAY SIZE, PRESENTATION MODE, AND OBSERVATION TIME STATIC 0 MOVING 6 IN, / X z 50 0 10 20 30 SECONDS 40 50 Fig. 6. Median time to recognize targets. RANGE OF TRIES TO RECOGNIZE, SECS A -PRESENTATION MODE 40 40 36 - 36 32 - 32 28 - 26 24 - 24 20 - 20 ID - 16 12 - 12 e - 4 - 4 MOVING STATIC B- OBSERVATION TIME 10 20 30 C -INTERACTION-GROUND COVERAGE, PRESENTATION MODE, AND OBSERVATION TIME 40 36 32 28 24 20 16 12 4 X STATIC 0 MOVING IS N MI 9 N. MI. 40 50 0 10 20 30 40 SECONDS SECONDS Fig. 7. Range of times to recognize targets. TAM Peri nnd Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Pere Rec( Med Reck Ran Rec Nut Tar; *Si "C clisi .per ?stu col (5, prc me fro Wa ma the prc oh! TAI SOI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 1-IUMAN FACTORS CHARLES W. SIMON 6 secs. III. 5.9 secs. -or either measure differs at could be expected by obability level. -USSION 21early indicated that for investigation, target ac- was never better and 2. imagery was presented steps than when the a in a continuous move- y. There was no differ- . presentation modes in ding targets. However, those targets that were sooner on the moving 1:114CTION-DISRLAY SIZE EGENTATION MODE, AND SERVATION TIME STATIC MOVING iZ IN. 6 IN, 20 30 40 50 SECONDS .TION-GROUND COVERAGE, -0-ATION MODE, AND -/ATiON TIME TATIC mACIWING 8 N. MI, 9 N. MI. 1 20 30 40 SECONOS 30 TABLE 10 Performance with combinations of ground coverage and display size yielding equal scale factors. Ground Coverage Scale Factor 11108.000 9 mi. sq. 18 mi. sq. Display Size 6? sq. 12" sq. Percentage of Target Recognized ( %) Median Time to Recognize (secs) Range of Time to Recognize (secs) Number of False Targets Acquired** Moving 89.8 Static 80.8 Av. 85.3 52.2* 53.8* 53.0* Moving 22.0 23.0 Static 37.5 66.0* Av. 29.8 44.5* Moving 7.3 Static 15.2 Av. 11.2 Moving 7.0 Static 12.0 6.8 19.8 13.3 8.0 9.0 T19.0 17.0 *Significant at .05 probability level. **Corrected for twice as much 9-mile imagery. display and with significantly less variability in performance. Only one other published experiment, a study by Erickson (1964), was found that compared target acquisition with a moving (5, 7, and 10 degree/second) and with a static presentation mode. Although his method for measuring time with the static display differed from that of the present study and his imagery was not as representative of the real world, many of the relationships he discovered among the variables studied support those found in the present experiment. Erickson required 16 male observers to search for an incomplete ring (Landolt C) among a number of solid rings TABLE 11 Some results of Erickson's study. June, 1965-199 arranged systematically throughout a square field. Along with a number of other experi- mental conditions, he compared search per- formance in a moving and static field. Using percent of targets detected as the criterion, he found that performance deteriorated with a decrease in search time whether the image was moving or static. Erickson concluded that "target movement, per se, does not necessarily (sic) have a detrimental effect upon search performance within the 0 to 10 degree/second range" and his results suggest that, in fact, the percent of targets detected actually was greater with the moving imagery than with the static imagery when the observation time was short- est. The results comparing the two modes were shown in Figure 5 of his paper and can be summarized as shown in Table 11. Although no statistics were applied, the ex- tent of the difference between the percent ac- quired with a moving and static mode up to the 70 per second condition was almost negli- gible and possibly due to chance. At 10?/ second, or the shortest observation time, the difference between the two modes had in- creased considerably, favoring the moving pres- entation mode. In the experiments reported in this paper, the average visual angular rate was probably considerably less than 70 /second3 and the lack of a significant difference in the percent of targets acquired agreed with the apparent re- sults of Erickson's study. Erickson did not re- port any time-to-detection, so no comparison between the two tasks could be made on this Since subjects were free to position their heads at any distance from the screen, the visual angular rate varied. This estimate of angular velocity was based on head positions measured in a subsequent, but similar study. Visual Angular Velocity in Moving Mode Available Search Time in Static Mode Percent of Targets Detected Moving Static Percentage Difference Ratio of Percentage Difference to Smallest Percentage 5? /second 7?/second 10? /second 2.9 second 2.0 second 1.4 second 77 81 4 61 64 3 50 40 10 .05 .05 .25 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 200?June, 1965 measurement. However, when the results of Erickson's study are combined with those of the present study an interesting relationship is suggested among relative performance effective- ness of the moving and static presentation modes, observation time, and the probability and speed of detection. The relationship sug- gested is as follows: At the slower speed there is little difference between the modes in terms of the number of targets acquired although those targets which are found are detected more quickly with the moving presentation mode; at faster speeds, there is little difference be- tweeen the two modes in the time to acquire a target, but the probability of acquiring tar- gets is higher with the moving presentation mode. In both modes, performance deteriorates as observation times are shortened. In general, the moving presentation mode would seem to offer the greater advantage for target acquisi- tion in near-real time. In the sections to fol- low, a rationale for the above statement will be developed and the implications for equip- ment design will be discussed. An Explanation Of The Results Of The Present Experiment The conditions under which the results of the present experiment were obtained should be carefully delineated. Although it is believed that these conditions are representative of those found in a great many actual reconnaissance missions, they are specified to avoid overgen- eralizing to situations in which they do not exist. However, as it will be shown, the re- sults obtained appear to have generality beyond the limits of the present study. The conditions which existed in the present experiments were: (1) targets could essentially appear anywhere on the display; (2) the ob- servation times were so short that a thorough search of the display was not possible, al- though at the slower observation times, several rough scans could be made; (3) some targets tended to be marginal in size, near the per- ceptual threshold; and (4) the observers were thoroughly briefed and made familiar with the HUMAN FACTOR; targets' relatively well-defined patterns. Thes{ four conditions meant that a very fine, system. atic scanning pattern was necessary to search the display and that the use of periphera: vision was limited. The observation time was spent primarily in searching for the target which, when seen foveally, would generally be recognized immediately. Erickson, too, noted ,that with moving imagery, particularly at the faster rates, use of peripheral vision was lim- ited. In the present study, the observers were in- structed to "find the targets as soon as possible after they appeared on the display." This meant that with the static presentation mode, a thorough and careful search in two dimen- sions over the entire display was required. With the moving presentation mode, however, the optimum strategy was to search the display in a single dimension along the edge at which the targets first appear while the imagery moves across the display. This searching procedure minimized the time to find the target and maximized the time available to study it be- fore it disappeared (if further study were needed). The two search modes are illustrated in Figure 8. Assuming no difference in scan rate or the effective cone of vision, the observer could scan the same area of the imagery in a speci- fied period of time in both modes. This would suggest that the probability of finding a target would be the same with both presentation modes, and this theoretical equality was borne out by the empirical results. As observation times increased, a greater area could be scanned, and theoretically and empirically, more targets could be found. The difference between modes in the time required to find a target after it appeared on the display is the result of the difference in the search techniques used. With the static pres- entation mode, the length of the search path between the initial fixation point and the target position was proportional to the time to find a target. Since these two end points could be located anywhere on 'the display, the time in which a target could be found could vary from almost instantaneously (if the two end CHARLES points should entire obscrva cient in this ;? of the display which a targc was a pprox i rr period. As o fore, so did t and the varia These relat ing prcsentati optimally alot the maximun- by the time ? covered by ti leading edge. erally half o being considc entire display with the me shorter than more, the wit effective visu stant even v, time was vai variability of Casual obser the effective DIRECTIC Fig. 8. Di. for two rates. imagery scann Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 JUMAN FACTORS CHARLES W. SIMON June, 1965L-20I -defined patterns. These that a very fine, system. -was necessary to search the use of peripheral le observation time was _arching for the target, ally, would generally be. y. Erickson, too, noted. ;cry, particularly at the ripheral vision was lim-: the observers were in- rgets as soon as possible am the display." This atic presentation mode, I search in two dimen- .play was required. With Dn mode, however, the: :to search the display in g the edge at which the: aile the imagery moves: nis searching procedure' .o find the target and wailable to study it be.' if further study were :h modes are illustrated -Ice in scan rate or the, in, the observer could, the imagery in a speciE -oth modes. This would. ility of finding a target with both presentation, ical equality was borne. -esults. As observation' reater area could be zally and empirically,: found. !en modes in the time: 2.t after it appeared on of the difference in the: With the static pres- gth of the search path: on?point and the target: al to the time to find D end points could be; le display, the time in be found could vary} ously (if the two end; tI points should coincide) to the length of the entire observation period (which was not suffi- cient in this study to allow a thorough search of the display). Therefore, the average time in which a target was found on the static display was approximately one-half of the observation period. As observation time increased, there- fore, so did the average time to find a target, and the variability of the time to find a target. These relationships do not hold for the mov- ing presentation mode. If the observer searched optimally along the leading edge of the display, the maximum time to find a target was limited by the time the target stayed within the area covered by the effective visual cone along the leading edge. Average time to find was gen- erally half of the width of this area which, being considerably less than the width of the entire display, would explain why time-to-find with the moving imagery was significantly shorter than with the static imagery. Further- more, the width of the area subtended by the effective visual cone remained relatively con- stant even when display size or observation time was varied which tended to reduce the variability of the time-to-detect measurements. Casual observation suggests that variations in the effective visual cone came from a shift in MOVING DIRECTION OF IMAGERY MOTION -ix- thc distance of the observer's head from the display and the distance the center of the scan pattern is from the edge of the display; these tended to be slight. Supplemental Study. Although the empirical results supported these analytical conclusions, it was decided to check the possibility that they could be accounted for by the observers using a different scan rate for the two presentation modes. Perhaps, it was hypothesized, the re- sults of the original experiment had been arti- fically produced by the implied instructions concerning search techniques with the static presentation mode. It may have been that allowing the observer to practice and become familiar with the length of the observation time available may have encouraged him to use all of that time to carefully scan the static display once. If he had instead made a rapid scan of the display first (or several rapid scans), he might have reduced his median time-to-find-targets by being able to pick up the more obvious targets quicklyduring the rapid scans. To check this alternative, a supplemental study was carried out using two of the ob- servers previously tested under the 40-second time limit. They were given two test sessions, STATIC Fig. 8. Diagrams illustrating search paths and scannable areas with moving and static presentations for two rates. Broken lines represent path of eye movements: Shaded portion represents the area of imagery scanned within area of effective vision. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 202?June, 1965 one for each of the two presentation modes. Only the 18-mile wide strip and the 12-inch square display were used with a 40-second observation time limit. The subjects were in- structed?in fact, urged?to scan the display during the static presentations as rapidly and as often as they reasonably could. They were told to continue to scan the moving presenta- tions in the same way they had done previ- ously. The results are shown in Table 12. Although performance in the static pres- entation mode tended to improve slightly over the original run, neither the overall results nor the conclusions drawn in the original study were changed by these results. This improve- ment may have been due to the increased scan rate used with the static presentation, or it could have resulted from the practice which the observers by this time had with the test imagery. In either case, under the conditions examined here, the number of targets found with either mode of presentation did not differ more than could be expected by chance. The 'differences in the time required to find and recognize tar- gets with the two presentation modes, however, remained relatively large. Considerations for Equipment Design. Three other factors, in addition to those al- ready described, favor the moving presentation over the static one. First, it has been found that it is difficult for an observer to make a precise and systematic search. Although he may conscientiously try to scan in a particular and regular manner and reports that he is doing so, eye movement records reveal this is not always the case (Townsend and Fry, 1960; White and Ford, 1960). In the static mode, this situation can lead to overlapping or un- HUMAN FACTORS scanned areas, for the observer must search in two dimensions with no external restrictions applied to his search pattern. In the moving mode, however, using the leading edge of the display to guide his scan in one dimension while the imagery moves by in the second dimension reduces the inefficiency of search. Second, even if it took the same time to find a target once it appeared on the display with either mode, the moving mode is still favored when time-to-find is critical. The reason for this preference is that a time delay is "built in" to the static mode. The delay is that required to allow the image to build up in the near-real- time mission. Thus, if a target lay just outside the section of the terrain being displayed dur- ing a single static presentation, it would have to wait a complete observation time period before it would appear on the next frame. On the other hand, with the continuously moving mode, the target would move onto the display within seconds after it was sensed by the radar, Third, if the observer's task is to find a pre- defined target area rather than a target, the possible breaking up of the terrain context into two sequentially presented static frames could detrimentally affect the recognizability of the area pattern. Task effects will be ana- lyzed later. Scale Factor. In this study, the scale factor of the imagery could be enlarged in two ways: (1) by increasing the size of the display and filling it with an enlarged image, or (2) by de- creasing the area of the terrain being displayed on a display of a given size. I3oth methods yielded results supporting the generally ac- cepted contention that performance is im- proved with the larger scale factor. More targets were acquired and found in less time. TABLE 12 Results of supplemental study of the effect of scanning instructions to two observers. Original Supplemental Test* Moving Presentation Mode Static Presentation Mode Number Recognized Median Time Number Median Time Recognized 33 3.5 seconds 37.5 14.8 seconds 33.5 3.5 seconds 38.0 12.5 seconds "18-mile wide imagery, 12-inch square display, 40-second observation time. Values are average of two observer's performance. CHARLES \: However, by the two factor, per considered \\! sign decisio target Size \\ varying the in the full than varyirv holding grot phasizes the: techniques p! the larger d: presented ??'; quired to times the 1-)1- play, the in twice as gr, only in one When groun play size hel, size increast image area a fact which was also inc One other effectiveness The apparer the display was partially viewing dist; in display s servers. woul reducing th. target. Cor observed N1 changed. It should under some of ground c could be d? . formance. 1 amount of which in cc critical in lo directly. TI coverage re. in the lengtl fixed vehiel limit beyonc Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 MAN I' ACTO irver must search in external restrictions ern. In the moving leading edge of the in one dimension ; by in the second ficiency of search. he same time to find on the display with ! -node is still favored ' :al. The reason for iae delay is "built in" =clay is that required ! ; up in the near-real- -trget lay just outside being ?displayed dur- ' -ttion, it would have rvation time period the next frame. On :ontinuously moving DVC onto the display sensed by the radar, :ask is to find a pre- than a target, the the terrain context :ented static frames - the recognizability effects will be ana- the scale factor larged in two ways: of the display and silage, or (2) by de- rain being displayed size. Both methods the generally ac- -erforrnance is im- icale factor. More found in less time. 1,sentalion Mode Median Time 14.8 seconds 12.5 seconds erage of two observer's ("11,0.1.ES W. SIN1ON However, the difference in results obtained by the two methods demonstrated that scale factor, per se, was not the critical factor to be considered when making optimum display de- sign decisions. Although in both cases the target size was changed by the same amount, varying the amount of ground area displayed in the full frame affected performance more than varying the 'size of the display while holding ground area constant. 'This feet em- phasizes the role that search and scanning techniques play in the recognition task. With the larger display, although the ground area presented was the same, the observer was re- quired to search a static display area four times the previous size. With the moving dis- play, the increase in search effort was only twice as great, since the observer searched only in one dimension along the leading edge. When ground coverage was reduced with dis- play size held constant, not only was the target size increased, but the portion of the total image area occupied by the target was larger, a fact which was not so when the display size was also increased. One other factor may have also reduced the effectiveness of increasing the display size. The apparent increase in target scale factor on the display when the larger display was used was partially offset by a shift in the observer's viewing distance to compensate for the change in display size. With the larger display, ob- servers would tend to move back further, thus reducing the visual angle subtended by the target. Considerably less compensation was observed when the ground coverage was changed. It should not be overlooked, however., that. under some circumstances, reducing the area of ground covered within a fixed display size could be detrimental to reconnaissance per- formance. For one thing, to do so reduces the amount of contextual terrain information which in certain reconnaissance tasks can be critical in locating targets too small to be seen directly. Then, too, the reduction in ground coverage results in a corresponding decrease in the length of the observation time (for any fixed vehicle speed) and this may reach a limit beyond which the observer no longer has June, 1965-203 sufficient time to perceive the target. Observation Time and linage Movement. In a near-real-time mission, the observer may have little control over the length of the ob- servation time. Time, however, represents one of the most severely limiting factors in this form of reconnaissance and targets which might have eventually been discovered had the search time been longer, may not be detected. When the imagery is moving, the shorter observation time creates an effect in addition to that of limiting the search period. In this case, observation time and movement combine to create an angular imagery rate which, if fast enough, results in a blurring and reduction of visual acuity (Miller and Ludwigh, 1960). It is this possibility that has made many design engineers skeptical of the use of moving imagery for reconnaissance tasks. In practice, however, this fear appears overemphasized for the following reasons. First, most of the rates encountered in the airborne reconnaissance situation (as well as in the faster moving reconnaissance missions from space) are below the point at which blurring occurs. Second, and possibly even more important, current research results sug- gest that whatever the degradation in per- formance which results from a decrease in ob- servation time with the moving imagery, a greater degradation will occur with the static imagery. As observation time decreases to a minimum, observers eventually reach a point where they stare at only one point on the dis- play (Erickson, 1964). Under this condition, success in finding a target on the static display is reduced to being lucky enough to be staring at the correct spot at the right time?a highly unlikely occurrence. With the moving display, however, staring at one spot does permit the search of a greater area, namely, a line across the display as the imagery (however blurred it may be) moves by. For this reason, the prob- ability of detection at the very fast speeds can be expected to be higher for the moving pres- entation mode, and this is exactly what Erick- son (1964) found. Both Erickson and the present experimenter noted that at excessively fast rates, observers have difficulty in searching only the lead edge. "7- 7., 7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 204?June, 1965 Instead they begin to follow the rapidly mov- ing image across the display. The absolute value where this occurs is not known, but it could be related to the velocity at which blur begins to have a noticeable effect and the ob- server attempts to track the image to compen- sate for the movement. The blurring effect of movement could have an effect once the search phase of the task is over and the observer must study particular patterns in finer detail. This was not con- sidered in the present studies. However, if this task were required, once the target had been found, the display could be turned off and the imagery studied statically if necessary. But short observation times are not the only disturbing factor in this reconnaissance task. Longer observation times may also result in a performance decrement as an effect of the difficulty of maintaining a sustained vigilance. In this experiment, the longest observation period was 24 minutes. Although there were many more targets in this laboratory study than might be expected under field conditions. subjects reported feeling drowsy and of "blocking" while monitoring the continuously moving display over the longer time periods. With marginal targets, even at speeds in which there is sufficient time to study a display thoroughly, targets may be missed if the over- all situation creates suboptimum levels of alertness in the observer. Tasks. The task of the present study was one of target recognition. As stated earlier, the targets were clearly defined and readily recognizable, once they were fixated foveally. Detailed examination was not required. An exploratory investigation has been made comparing the moving and static presentation modes when the task was one of finding a target area. Tentative results suggest that the static, sequential frame mode may be preferred at the faster viewing rates. Aerial photographs covering nearly forty thousand square miles were used to simulate the view from an orbit- ing spacecraft through an optical telescope. For this situation, target area acquisiton relied primarily upon the recognition of gross terrain features and relatively few man-made objects. HUMAN FACTORS To accomplish this it was necessary that rivers and mountain patterns, for example, be ex- amined over areas which could not be encom- passed in one or a few visual fixations, and that numerous similar appearing features be studied and rejected before finding the correct ones. Observing these complex patterns ap- peared more easily accomplished when the image was static than by searching the lead edge of a moving display.4 Furthermore, if clearly visible cbcck-poInts of known space- time distances from the target area were found, the static, sequential frame presentation mode facilitated keeping track of the time interval more easily than did the continuously moving mode. Although it is true that a continuously changing display does allow a continuity for following prebriefed terrain features into the target area while sequentially presented static frames conceivably could break up this con- tinuity and the target area pattern, this dis- advantage of the static mode seems outweighed by its advantages. Also, the continuity of the static presentation mode can be improved if there is not a one-hundred percent change in the image from frame to frame. Partial Static Presentation Modes. Most of the disadvantages of the static presentation mode and the differences in performance be- tween it and the moving presentation mode possibly may be removed if the frame-by- frame change is only a partial one each time. For example, if instead of each frame chang- ing to a completely new image per frame the change would occur when only twenty-five per- cent of the image is new, several effects occur. First of all, the time available for each new portion is reduced proportionately from the total time that would be available if the entire frame had changed. Second, however, the ob- server would have a proportionately smaller area to study, and what is more important, he may now essentially duplicate the scan mode that proved optimal with the moving presenta- tion mode, i.e., scan primarily along the lead edge. Furthermore, if the optimum percent of 'Presumably a similar effect might be noted if targets were complex and ill-defined. part rcla viski mtty deli tend! in ti imp an sub Ano 13 Eric iv3 . Mill Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 ilum FACTORS a was necessary that rivers rns, for example, be ex- hich could not be encom- few visual fixations, and ir appearing features be before finding the correct -se complex patterns ap- accomplished when the -in by searching the lead iisplay.4 Furthermore, if -points of known space- ne target area were found, frame presentation mode -ack of the time interval the continuously moving -ue that a continuously 2s allow a continuity for terrain features into the iiientially presented static =ould break up this con- ..t area pattern, this dis- c mode seems outweighed iso, the continuity of the _ode can be improved if andred percent change in ie to frame. 2ntation Modes. Most of the static presentation ' tnces in performance be- -oving presentation mode anoved if the frame-by- a partial one each time. ad of each frame chang- -icw image per frame the -..hen only twenty-five per- -iew, several effects occur. = available for each new broportionately from the be available if the entire Second, however, the ob- i proportionately smaller -tat is more important, he duplicate the scan mode vith the moving presenta- primarily along the lead the optimum percent of itr effect might be noted if -id ill-defined. C11.1.1i1 ES \V. SIMON partial frame change could be determined? relative to the width of the effective cone of vision?the sequential series of static changes may serve to better pace the observer and to delineate his scan without introducing the tendency for the eyes to follow the imagery as in the moving presentation mode. This might improve performance at the faster rates. Whether or not these speculations are true is an empirical question to be determined in a subsequent study. REFERENCES Anonymous. Dynamic Viewer Model 100-A. Cul- ver City: Hughes Aircraft Company Report B-40, 19 April 1963. Erickson, R. A. Visual search performance in a moving structured field. 1. opt. Soc. Amer., 1964, 34, 399-405. Miller, J. W., & Ludwigh, E. Time required for detection of stationary and moving objects as a June, 1965-205 function of size in homogeneous and partially structured visual fields. In A. Morris and E. P. Home (Eds.) Visual Search Techniques. Wash- ington, D.C.: Nat. Acad. Sci., Nat. Res. Coun., Publication 712, 1960. Nygaard, J. E., Slocum, G. K., Thomas, J. 0., et al. The Measurement of Stimulus Complexity in High-Resolution Sensor Imagery. Wright- Patterson AFB, USAF AMRL TDR-64-29, 1964. Rhodes, F. Predicting the difficulty of locating targets from judgments of image characteristics. Wright-Patterson AFB, USAF AMRL TDR 64- 19, 1964. Townsend, C. A., & Fry, 0. A. Automatic scan- ning of serial photographs. In A. Morris and E. P. Home (Eds.) Visual Search Techniques, Washington, D.C.: Nat. Acad. Sci., Nat. Res. Coun., Publication 712, 1960. White, C. T., & Ford, A. Ocular activity in visual search. In A. Morris and E. P. Horne (Eds.) Visual Search Techniques. Washington, D.C.: Nat. Acad. Sci., Nat. Res. Coun., Publication 712, 1960. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 VI/71i Zd:tor's Note paper is one section of a ;epert entitled "Display Techniques r Digital weapons Control Sys- ...erns" prepared by I-I. R. Luxenberg? cf Q. L. Donness, of the Bunker- Ramo Corp., ror the U.S. Naval Ord- nance Test Station (NOTS), China : Lake, Calif., under contract number ; ? i\D3z.',33-10519. Another section of - the some report appeared in the last issue of .NFORMATION DISPLAY under are title -Photometric Units" by ft R. Luxenberg. introduction Display device and system parameters are of two types: (1) Those pertaining to system inte- gration requirements with associ- ated environmental and logistic considerations. (2) Those pertaining to the interface with the observer. The first category consists of such items as physical size, weight, power, signal levels, symbol encoding, interface requirements, temperature, humidity, shock, vibration, cost, reliability (MTBF), and maintainability (MTTR). ' The second category includes such fac- tors as brightness, contrast, .color capa- bility, resolution, viewing distance, and vie,wing angle. All of these parameters arc either avail- able from the manufacturer (many must, of course, be properly discounted) or may be tested directly. IL is not the intent of this paper to 7. :1 ri '1 Li. Li 7Th TT r '", b)-7. H. R. Luxenberg and Q. L. Bonness duplicate detailed descriptive material which is already easily available and well presented in the current literature. For example, several good articles describe, in some detail, techniques for CRT char- acter generation; others describe alpha- numeric .indicators, etc. Furthermore, it would be impractical to attempt to tabu- late operating parameters for all cur- rently available displays here. Several extremely good summaries are readily available, although even these suffer from some incompleteness. It is, how- ever, the purpose of this paper to present a quantitative discussion of the physical units and psycho-physical significance of those parameters peculiar to display tech- nology. Since the function of a display unit is to transfer information to the operator by visual sensing, it is important to, consider those parameters that determine the capa- bility of the. human eye to perceive infor- mation. Therefore, the following section discusses those factors that are important to the visual perception of information. A definition of each factor is given, and a discussion of the way in which it re- lates to the evaluation of display devices is included. Brightness and Contrast Contrast, not brightness, is the signi- ficant factor in display legibility. Bright- ness is generally specified. because it is dependent only on the equipment, where- as contrast is generally a function of ambient lighting. Brightness is allo speci- fied because it would seem that the high- er the brightness, the greater the visibility under higher ambient light. This is not necessarily true, . since some displays of lower intrinsic brightness have bettcr visibility than far brighter ones. (See Tables 1 and 2). Furthermore, unnecessarily high bright- ness may be a luxury where ambielo light is subject to control, since it has been determined experimentally that where observers have control over ambi- ent lighting for reading they tend to choose lower values than are generally considered optimum. For example, under a controlled test', when the maximum available illuminations were 10, 30, end 45 foot-candles, the observers selected 5, 12, and 16 foot-candles as the optimum values. The required brightness of a display should be obtained by the following pro- cedure. First, select (preferably at the lowest acceptable level) the arnbidlt light desired at the work station, and hy means of a mockup measure the ambie?t light falling on the display surface. The source (s ) of ambient illumination shoul'd be relocated, collimated or otherwise shielded to reduce this to a minimum. Acceptable contrast ratios are: for wli:e. symbols on a black background, 5 to 1; for line drawings or text on a white background, 25 to 1; for pictorial scenes. 100 to 1. From a knowledge of the reflectivity of the display surface (unless it is glossy, unity is a conservative - estimate), the brightness of the background is obtained, and multiplication by the desired coil: trast ratio will specify the brightness n.7 quired of the symbols. For example, if the ambient illumination on an eleetro- luminescent alphanumeric display whose luminance is 10 foot-lamberts can be held below two foot-candles, the resultihg Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A00-190-0020.61-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 _ 3 1/2 optical-line pairs Detailed alphanumeric 7 TV-line representation il-iCURE 1: Character representation. TABLE 1 Typical Brightness (foot-lamberts)* Surface of the sun 4.8 x 106 Surface of a 60-watt frosted incandescent bulb ("hot spot") 36,000 Surface of a 60-watt "white" incandescent bulb 9,000 Surface of a 15-watt fluorescent tube 3,000. White paper in direct sunlight 9,000 Clear sky 2,000 Surface of moon, bright area 750 White paper on office desk 25 Pulsed electroluminescent mosaic panel 20 Television raster 20 Light valve, 10- by 10-foot diffusing screen, 2-kilowatt lamp 20 Theatre screen open gate 16 Note that pulsed electrolurninescent mosaic panels have brightness comparable with television raster or opengate theatre screens. *Brightness values.compiled from: (1) D. G. Fink, TELEVISION ENGINEERING HANDBOOK, McGraw-Hill, 1959. (2) IES LIGHTING HANDBOOK, THIRD EDITION, Illuminating Engineering Society, 1959. (3) REFERENCE DATA FOR RADIO ENGINEERS, I. T. and T. Corp., 1949. (4) Measurements and Calculations by the Authors. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 () 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 FiGjRE 2: Full 5 x 7 dot mosaic (35 elements, full slpnanumeric). (..):Itrast of 5 to i will be adequate for good legibility. if, however, the observer is working at a desk where the illumination is 50 foot-candies, a sheet of white paper will have a luminance of 40 foot-lamberts and the 4-to-1 brightness difference be- tween paper and display may prove an- noying. Since the display brightness cannot be raised, the working lighting can be reduced. If the observer is given control over the ambient lighting, he will find an optimum (for him) working Size-Resolution-Legibility Fiesolution is generally described in terms of line pairs per millimeter (lines/ millimeer). The average observer can resolve two lines that subtend an angle at the observer's eye of one minute. Since 1 minute of arc 0.0003 radian, the eye resolves at a viewing distance of. 10 inches (250 millimeters) about 13 lines/ There is some confusion in the litera- ture between optical lines and television lines. Optical lines are synonomous with. line pairs (i.e., an optical line consists of a black and white pair). To show one line pair on a television raster requires at least two televi,sion lines. Because the. optical line pair may not coincide with FIGURE 5: Numerics using. reduced 4 x 7 dot mosaic. FIGURE 3: Reduced 5 x 7 dot mosaic (27 ele- ments, numeric only). TABLE 2 Contrast Levels Textual copy (white on dark) 5-10 to 1* Line drawings and black on white text 25 to 1 Photographs 100 to 1 "Legibility of fine detail degrades with increasing contrast if the eye is adapted to darker background level, because of dazzle effect. the raster lines, more than two television lines are required. The correction factor of 1.4 is called the Kell facto?. Thus, one optical line pair requires 2.8 tele- vision lines, for full resolution. Resolution in terms of line pairs is significant for display purposes only when photographs are shown, where the observer is required to distinguish be- tween tWo close objects. Actually, if the existence or nonexistence of a black line on a white background is to be deter- 'mined, the .line need subtend an angle of only 0.5 second at the eye. FIGURE 4: Reduced 4 x 7 aot mosaic (20 ele- ments, numeric only). If alphanumerics -are to be legible, the vertical angle subtended at the eye should be at least 10 minutes of are. Since 10 minutes of arc arc approximate- ly 1/360 radian, for each foot of viewing distance the character must be at least 1/30 inch in height. While the eye can : resolve 10 optical line pairs in 10 min- utes of arc, this does not mean that the detail present in an alphanumeric charac- ter requires 10 line pairs for legible pres- entation. An examination of the "E" shown in Figure 1 reveals that no more than 3.5 optical line pairs are required. The seven- television-line representation of the "E" on the right side of the figure may ap- pear somewhat crude when viewed close- up, but when viewed from a distance at which the lines are not resolved, it is quite legible. Although the number of television lines. used is just twice the number of optical line pairs for the illustration, near per- fect registration of the raster scan to the figure being displayed was assumed. To take care of the misregistration problem, the -Kell factor (2.8) is introduced. The product of 3.5 (the. number of optical lines required) by 2.8 (the Kell factor) is very nearly 10, the number of tele- vision lines required to present a charac- ter of good legibility. 0 000 000 0 0 0000 00 0000 00 00 CO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 00 00 0000 000 000 0 00 000 00 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0000 000 0...000 00 00 00 0 C.,' C. "Displays, Picirs and Lighting," Informa: 45;yp!,,y, Vol. 1, No, 1, pp 16-26, Sep- tcinberiOetki.)e; 2D, G. Fink, Television Engineering Ilandbo,k, - 1c.)50. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 the legibility of the characters ,:ntis on their structure, there is no .ivcfsal agreement on the optimum ..nariienDr she. Among the recommend- ed shapes arc the following: (1) Modified gothic (sans serif) char- acter of height/width ratio of 3 to 2 for most letters, with the ex- ception of 1, M, and W, and a stroke width of 3; of the character (2) The same as above, but with a height/width ratio of 5 to 3 and a stroke width of 1/6 to 1/8 of i.he character height (MIL-SPEC- 33558). Inc: authors prefer the 3 to 2 height/ width ratio with a bolder stroke, say 1/6 of the character width. The character is then nine strokes *?:. strokes wide. parity and clock hits. These six bits per- mit display of a maximum of 63 charac- ters (or 64 if the "blank" is counted). This number can include 26 alphas, 10 numerics, and up to 27 special symbols, including punctuation marks, etc. While the 6-bit code can be decoded into 64 "lines," one per possible charac- ter, in many display applications it is found more desirable to reduce the num- ber of decoded lines by assembling the characters from a smaller number of' ele- mentary elements, as, for example, by a dot or stroke mosaic. Dot mosaics ? The coarsest mosaic that is capable of providing easily legible alphanumeric symbols is a 5- by 7-dot mosaic, as shown in Figure 2. Here, only 35 decoded lines. are required. If only numerics and a limited number of symbols arc required depending on the manufacturer. The bars, strokes, or segments are arrailgeti in a pattern similar to one of those shown in Figure 6. The exact shape varies from one man- ufacturer to another, with some rounding of corners and minor variations in the way adjacent segments join. The segments may be electrolumincs- cent strips, electrochemical cells or cath- odes in a glow discharge tube, or they may be trans-illuminated by neon or in- candescent lamps. The power require- ments, luminosity, and color differ in each method of implementation. The characters are nearly as legible as those made from a 5- by 7-dot mosaic, but logic (switching) requirements are reduced from 35 inputs for the full 5- by-7 matrix to 16, 14, 9, or 7, depending on the type of bar matrix chosen. A deci- (a) The double- hon;-:, window (sev- en elements, nu? meric only). FlCURE 3: Segmented character formats. A minimum of two stroke widths should be provided between adjacent symbols. Special Character Shapes While well shaped gothic characters' are most attractive and are generally -greed upon as providing the ultimate in ieg.bility, certain types of display imple- mentation preclude their use. Instead, they present characters of a stylized sl-itiPe made up of discrete elements. 3nce these are "learned" they become i.early as legible as the pure gothic to which they are an approximation. De- vices in this class use either dot or stroke rnesaies, as discussed below. rj-:3 primary reasons for the adoption hese types of characters are economy irathc;ty oi implementation, as is- apparent from the following con- ,:rations. Alphanumeric data are stored a..:d processed in data processors in data :;...ary coded form, requiring a minimum SX ou:s no:? 0/m rnotor ?r Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy (b) The double- hung window (nine elements). (e.g., +, ., etc.), some of the ele- ments are not required, and the number of lines may be reduced to 27, as shown in Figure 1 For numerics only, the reduced 4- by. 7-mosaic shown in Figure 4 is satisfac- tory. This mosaic requires only 20 lines. In general, dot mosaics present better appearing characters than stroke mosaics, but stroke matrices are more economical in the sense that fewer lines are required. However, stroke, matrices with as many as 35 specially shaped elements have been devised; these give extremely good. characters, far better appearing than the dot matrix, with no more operating com- plexity. The elements may also be ar- ranged in a parallelogram rather than in a rectangle to provide sloped or "italic" characters. Stroke mosaics This type of character presentation is known variously as the bar matrix the ? Approved for Release 2012/04/23: (c) The starburst (14 elements, full alphanumerics; also available is a 16-element starburst with the upper and lower horizontal elements split). NOTE: Segments may be electrolum- inescent, gas tube cathodes, electro- fluors, or illuminated by incandes- cent or neon lamps. mal point or underline bar may be added ' In some instances. The same height/ width/stroke ratios apply as for shaped characters. Screen Characteristics The length-lambert units of the previ- ous section are defined ? by defining the luminance of a perfect diffuser, approxi- mated by a fresh chalk surface, to- he numerically equal to- the incident illumi- nation in length-candles (e.g., a perfect. diffuser in bright sunlight is illuminated by 9000 foot-candles and has a lumi- nance of 9000 foot-lamberts as seen from any direction). For other-than-perfect diffusers, a re- flectivity factor is Used to obtain the luminance.- Note that the reflectivity need not be less than unity and it may vary with direction. ? For specular reflection the luminance of the reflected image is that of ?the source -itself. If the perfect diffuser in the' CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 .n., the luminance of the mirror is x ftPfoot-lamberts (same as the solar ace) on the axis of the reflected rays ..nd aero off-axis. Thus, the reflectivity " ?I of the mirro; in this case is a J.y peaked function with a maximum V.1 af (4.S x 10)/9000 or greater than 3 x 10. 13irectiona1 screen with flaked alumi- num surfaces (to give high gains) are .0e.:ently used to obtain greater image 'aii, tness, but at the price of a restrict- cti viewing angle. An increase of granu- larity in the aluminum paint provides a greater viewing angle; or the surface be embossed with tiny convex mir- rors, which will not be visible at normal viewing distances. The mirrors spread the incident para- llel rays into a cone generally of rec- tangular cross-section, to cover the audi- ence space desited. The angles of the cone are simply related. to the width or height and focal length of the tiny mir- rors. An analogous situation holds for rear- projection screens. The analog of a per- fect mirror is a clear layer. Either more diffusion or a' lenticular structure May be used to provide the desired spread of light. Except for very small screens (i.e., those subtending a small angle at both eye and source), gains greater than 2 to -3 produce visible and annoying "hot- spots." Unhrcrmity of Luminance A projection screen (either front ? or rear) will not be uniformly luminous over its entire surface, although for all prac- tical purposes it may appear so. In this section, the reasons for non-uniformity and practical limits are discussed. The two major causes for screen fall- off are: (1) lack of uniformity in illumi- nation, and (2) the variation of gain with the angle between line of sight and the reflected or transmitted projection ray. This angle is called bend-angle. Illumination fall-off is primarily due to a cos 0 factor which enters when a finite-area lamp source and conventional optics are used in the projector. The angle 0 is the half-angle subtended by the screen at the projector. With small sources and aspherical optics, the factor may be increased, perhaps to cos" 0 or better, but at a cost". The easiest cure is to reduce 0 by increasing the projec- tion distance. If space is limited, a fold- ed optical path may be required. Even with a uniformly illuminated screen, the illuminance will fall off with bend-:1:-:gle, unless the screen is a per- fect diffuser (constant gain). The angle at which the gain is one-half its peak value is called the half-power, or 50% "Wick Screcil Slick Proicction," Dispirol, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp 8-15, Sep- . ? bend-angle. Higher gains mean smaller half-power bend-angles, unless the gain is deliberately lowered by the addition of light absorbing material for contrast con- trol (see below). While the eve is extremely sensitive to luminance differences in adjacent areas, it is relatively insensitive to a gradual 2- to-1 variation over a large area. For this reason, a 2-to-1 variation in screen lumi- nance is generally acceptable, and even a 3-to-1 variation will go unnoticed by the casual observer. Therefore, the re- striction to a .30% fall-off (often seen in display specifications) is a luxury that the eye does not appreciate; a 50% fall- off is a much more reasonable specifi- cation value. Contrast Control From a knowledge of the incident il- lumination and the screen gain in the direction of view, the luminance is cal- culated by a simple multiplication. Un- fortunately, ambiei it light is also reflected back to the observer, adding to both highlighting and shadow luminances, thus reducing their ratio (the "contrast"). With a front-projection screen the only effective means of control is to use a high-gain (directive) screen, placing the observer on the reflected projector ray and avoiding all ambient light sources in the neighborhood of the Projector. Only scattered ambient light will then. degrade the contrast. This directivity ex- plains the effectiveness of the currently popular lenticular. screen for home pro- jection use. The lenticules direct the re- flected light primarily into a sharply - defined rectangular cone, with sharp fall- off outside, rather than into a broader region with gradual fall-off. With rear-projection screen, more free- dom is permitted in contrast control. A high-gain screen is inherently a poor re- flector; hence, contrast is immediately enhanced, even with light sources on the line of sight. As the gain is reduced by increasing diffusion to provide ?the de- sired viewing angle, the front reflectivity is, unfortunately, increased. The reflectivity may, in turn, be low- ered by adding opaque material or a neutral density filter. This reduces the gain but does not change the bend-angle as in the case of increasing diffusion. The effect of the filter is discussed further under the section on projection systems which follows. Projection System Parameters In projection systems the amount of light reaching the projection screen is a function of a number of parameters, but for well designed optical systems cer- tain rules of thumb are applicable. Sev- eral useful ones are: (1) A light valve television system ? using a xenon arc lamp has an n PI ?1 in (2) A 35-mm slide projector using an incandescent lamp has an output of between 1 and 2 lumens/watt. These are typical figures only, and the upper or lower limits may be exceeded by exceptionally well designed or by poorly adjusted equipments. For a uniformly diffusing matte screen, the screen brightness in foot-lamberts is ? equal to the luminous output of the pro- jector divided by the screen area in square feet. For example, the screen brightness proclticed by a 2000-watt xenon light valve operating at an output of one lumen/watt on a 10-foot square screen is 20 foot-lamberts. Both front- and rear-projection screens may appear either brighter or dimmer than a uniform diffuser, depending on the nature of the screen. and the line of view. The ratio of brightness to illumi- nance is a maximum when the line .of ViCW extends directly back to the pro- jector ?for a rear-projection screen, or along the reflected ray from the projec- tor for a front-projection screen. This maxi,imun value is referred to as the gain of the screen. Typical useful screen gains line in the range of 0.5 to 2.0, although higher-gain screens are used when the restricted viewing angles associated with them are not objection- able or are desirable. The higher the screen gain the higher the contrast, in general, for both front- and rear-projection screens. This is true for rear-projection screens, since the re- flection of ambient light from the front surface is low with high-gain screens. For front-projection screens, the direct- ivity of higher-gain screens is such that off-axis ambient light is not directed into the viewing area. An additional degree of contrast con- trol is available with rear-projection screens, in that a neutral. density face- ? plate may be incorporated. If the (one- way) transmission is x%, the two-way attenuation of reflected light is x",L, A 50% neutral density faceplate thus atten- uates the projected beam by a factor of ? two and the undesirable ambient reflec-. tion by a factor of four. Because of all the variables introduced by the screen parameters and the am- bient lighting conditions, it is not prac- ticable to specify brightness and contrast values for a projection system without defining the viewing conditions. It Is for this reason that projection systems are. best defined in terms of lumens output. Brightness in foot-lamberts for a gain screen screen is obtained by dividing the lumen output by the screen area in square feet. Contrast is obtained by maul- tiplying the ambient light in foot-candles by the screen reflectivity coefficient and computing the ratio of "light" to "dark" Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 BIBLIOGRAPHIC DATA SHEET Author(s) Leifer, I., Spencer, C.J.D., Welford, W.T. Technical Optics Section, Imperial College, London, S.W. 7 Affiliation and Richmond,?C.N., The Orangery, Kelvedon, Essex Title *"Grainless Screens for Projection Microscopy" Periodical JOSA No. -;571. 47 Vol. ? V Agency ? Publisher Place of Publication Date of Publication Pages 1422-1423 December 1961 CONZIENTS: Status Classification a. Ordered ?13'.-> In-house c. Reviewed 9-22-66 SAIM Key ;2,1, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 (;R.\ -;C.REENS IOR PROJECTION XliCROSCOPY ..,jeclive duration we mean the time during which the speed is less titan the minimum for which the htless effect occurs. re 2 shows an al tachment. we have constructed microscope, using this principle; the front screen so that each point on it describes a circle of about .;atin radius in a few seconds. The gap between the two -,1-.2ens is adjustable and we have found that: a separa- ?idn of up to a quarter of a millimeter has no discernible on the quality of the image. An alternative way of :::oving one screen is to vibrate it at ac-power-line fre- ,,uencv with an amplitude of about 0.5 mm; this is just cifective as the slowly moving rotating screen. and ;crhaps slightly simpler and cheaper. With this system we have found that an over-all :..ignitication of 1000 permits the finest detail resolvable :'means of an oil-immersion objective to be seen as ..carly as by direct viewing andthe screen luminance is ::creased to about 0.002 stub. A further fourfold ii.i.rease in luminance is obtained if the screens are .,:ihed to increase the forward transmission, as pro- :,oi.ed by Dyson'; the etching produces a clearly visible -iructure on the screens which can be seen moving, lint ..ititougly this may be slightly distracting to the ob- ,csver it does not impair the resolution of detail in the. :mge. On account of the strongly peaked polar diagram ,f these screens it is desirable to use a field lens as liacated in Fig. 2 in order to obtain a uniformly liltaninated field of view. An alternative proposal for a grainless screen is to use siagle rather rapidly moving screen6; we have tried *is in the form of a disk-shaped Screen revolving in its -4nplane and we have found that although an improve- , -,:cnt in definition of the image was obtained it was not marked as for the double screens. The steady. move- alt the screen through the field of view was always aired and this was distracting, but worse still was the that large-scale variations in scattering over the ? a.ed showed up as a flicker with the period of rotation. ,(1 this. could only be eliminated by using a speed of J. Dyson, 3. Opt. Soc. Am. 50, 519 (1960). 'N. IL Mason, British Patent 590,931 (1947). See also E. Lau J. Reinitz: "Optik alter Wellenlangen" p. 229 (Berlin, 1959) --Al E. Lau and R. Schalge, Feingeractechnik 7, 121 (1958). 1423 FIG: 2. Grainless screen. Light from the microscope eyepiece (lower right) after reaection from three mirrors forms the image on two ground glass screeds (upper center) nearly in contact. The image may be viewed through a field lens (upper right) if the screens arc etched for high forward transmittance. The ground- glass screen nearest- the observer undergoes circular translation in its own plane at about 20 rpm from the motor drive (bottom center): In an alternative arrangement the moving screen is oscillated in its own plane at ac-power-line frequency. rotation above about 30 rps, a- rather high speed for a thin disk of glass. A single, rapidly oscillating screen was found to be quite useless. ? To summarize, we have found the best results by using two screens separated by not more than 0.25 mm and with relative speed exceeding 1 mm/sec. A CXN OWLED GME NT -This work is supported financially by .an extramural . grant from the National Coal Board, but the opinions expressed are those 'of the authors and not necessarily those of the Board. c?,, ...-t...- ---,--' 0'664-- "- , j ,, -' 1,^ ''' ( , , ..,e .,..,..n.1. , "tt?1 ?.e ; Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 ; 1961 Grainless Screens for Projection Microscopy F. LF:IFF,R, C. J. D. SPENCER, AND W. T. wEr.roRD, Technical optics hn prrial College, London, S.11' .7 AND C. N. Ric:limos') The Orangery, Kelvedon, Essex (Received June 13, 1961) /Back-projection screens for projection microscopy with high luminance and no loss of definition are described; the screen grain is removed by the slow relative movement of two ground-glass screens placed face to face,/ routine sizing and counting of coal dust samples at National Coal Board Area Laboratories it is neces- sary to count particles as small as 0.5 /I. This is at pres- ent done with a projection microscope of conventional design with an opaque screen for front projection. In seeking ways to improve this technique we noticed that the picture had to be at least 50 cm from the eye because of physical obstruction of ? the view by the microscope, so that the magnification used was high, usually about 3000; the picture luminance was therefore very low, about 0.0002 stilb (candle/cm2), with a 250-w high- pressure mercury lamp as light source.' At this low luminance the Fechner fraction is about twice its normal value2 and the visual acuity is halved,' so that it is clearly desirable to increase the luminance considerably. The obvious way to do this is to use a back-projection screen, so that the distance from the eye to the screen can be considerably reduced, the magnification reduced and the luminance correspondingly increased ; but if this is clone we find that the grain of the ,projection screen obscures the detail in the image. All projection screens have a more or less grainy, sparkling appearance, and the scale of the grainy appearance is considerably larger than that of the actual grain in the material. For example, Fig. 1 shows part of a microphotometer trace across a ground glass screen obtained by using a scan FIG. 1. Microphotometer trace across fine, ground-glass screen. Illuminating and collectinr, apertures both f/80, scanning spot 100/4 square. The horizontal line at the top corresponds to 1 mm on the ground-glass screen. This source has a luminance of 20 000 stubs and the theoretical sceden luminance under the conditions of use described above is 0.006 stilb; the difference may reasonably be ascribed to reflection and absorption losses and to the difficulty of completely filling the condenser aperture with the image of the part of the source of maximum luminance. 2S. Hccht, J. gen. Physiol. 7, 235 (1924). ?3 S. Hecht, Arch. Opthalmol. 57, 564 (1928). fling spot 100 1.1 square and illuminating and collecting beams of N. A. 0.006; the standard deviation of the fluctuations in transmittance is ?23% and it can be seen that the scale of the irregularities is such that detaii several hundred microns across would be obscured although the.glass was "smoothed" (i.e., ground with the finest grade of emery as the last stage before polishing) and the grain size of the emery was only about 10y. The magnitude of the effect also depends on the numer- ical aperture of the illuminating and collecting beams, the values being chosen here to correspond approxi. mately to conditions in projection microscopy. This difficulty of graininess with small numerical aperture of the illuminating beam is found with all kinds of screens to a greater or less extent and it is probably unavoidable. A screen must have irregularities several microns in size if it is to scat ter at all and these must be arranged in a random manner so that the screen does not become simply a two-dimensional diffraction grat- ing; it is presumably the linear scale of the random variations in the screen structure which gives rise to the seen graininess, just as the graininess in a photographic emulsion corresponds not to individual grains of silver but to variations in grain density and clumping. , In order to circumvent this difficulty we have there- fore applied an old idea' for a grainless screen to be used in engineering gauge projectors, etc. In this system two ground-glass screens are placed with their ground sur- faces almost in contact and one is moved slowly in its own plane relative to the other.; the sparkle and graini- ness are continually changing and are smoothed out by persistence of vision to give a perfectly grainless, smooth screen. The effect, is quite startling for low-contrast objects of which the images are less than a millimeter in size on the screen, such objects are almost invisible when the screens arc stationary but become brilliantly clear when the movement is started. The relative speed of the screens needs only to be quite slow, about 1 mm: sec, but the motion- must be such that there are no stationary points or else if such a point does occur effective duration must be less than, say, 1/25 sec; by F. A. MacAdam and Taylor, Taylor Se: Hobson Limited, British patent 592,815 (1947). See also K. J. Habell and A. Co. Engineering Oplics (Pitman Publishing Corporation, New Tort,. - 1948), p. 273. 1422 ca.ct lye dui.. tive spec, cite- Jur,, 2 for a micro-i. iaoves so tint 5-mm radius :-..-reens is ad j tion of up to effect on iilC r. moving one sq ouency with eli.ective ii prhaps slight With this s magnifica Lion by means oi c.carly as by d increased to increase in in ,Itched to inc.; posed by Dysaf rue' tire on I .ltitoi.tgh this .-erver it does imago. On acco of these scree'. indicated in I illuminated fiel An alternati\ single rat her his in the form own planoand mein in definiti as marked as it. :11c711 of the scr.. not iced and this fact that, large- ?ercen showed 1.1 and this could ( .1. Dyson, J. OF .? N. H. Mason, j. Reinitz: "0 .ind E. Lau and K. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 -r? /7 j ?i 1 : ri, .???,-- r.....-7,. ......).L......'-)' L.-.i '.J '-'.."..; r;? , , r7. 7.471 r",n 7 !"7":"`? , ? '4-1 ?, ./7 v*- ? ?,"?1 ?????? ? ? Abstt'ac,-: presented in this ars usefui, handbook type tc.,7 enabic, the display acaigner to de.rmine rapid- values of basic parsiteters dis- so that he can de- .:....f.r.ntion to those unique to the design of a -tonaie;-ing dis,plays in terms of rniriimum resolvable, se- o ures of design charts aevelopeci 'rrom which , range vs:Lies can be aisplay element size, symbol size and n-iaxi- c.,uantity for orOered or these parametric values can in terms of the effect of other system pare- coin manner the feasi- biiity o?r a display configuration can varifiea in terms of fundamental inconsistent require- ments con ha modified in the con- cocai phase. DISPLAY ELEMENT SIZE (c ) IN INCHES 1,0 0.1 ,01 0.001 . ? by 'Glenn E. Whitham ? "7- r--1 r, a c a7 . _ 7 ,...11. .... ,.... ..... , . .. -1-1-II -:, - I'?? :-:-,,, ...,'1?:,-4-, I' , ' -; : ? ' i I -,?!,.?,r7t;',PI, ?-: ?? -116_, --:-- :1;,./1. ... - ., ? ??,I,,???,,? , - :? ? H ,,i....,,i:1-:-; .. : : . :i .. : '..r.:1 rffif,i i':ilj'e,',-L:,-:1 ':-'1:.'ll.:::::,-::::::.7.?:::".:1::::. '.:: i 4! :t: :: -i.--.V: i '.. : i:::::::.::::: ..i.H..:::::::7-:-:--- I'' ': .1 I: j ? :"-."!.. :;?, ,1,1 ,' t ? ?z,?-' 1, ?,4. ,1_,.....c,c, ,_, , .," ,? - . ..7 -7:----, 7---'-...,-,-,77,1.1; -i I , ? 11::4^., ,?,:::i:1:; :::. ?,-.1::11 ","?.:::',..',...-1.;'. ...,..: ,,,,.. ,,,, , L_,_ .. , .?? , 0 i li_ .. : . ..-,- ??-' ! -.;.4., , .. . , ?;:. -,;- I? ,C',r, .... :11-i4:;:lid:.i.:::...i :: ,:: j,;.':', 'L.': i LI' '?......, :n1 ;:.i 1.....: : -77 il 'O'Z'.... f ip. : iiHi,.../.:j:: id ...... .-.2 ... :H._ -.1 i I . .4, I.c., ,,:i .? -.. i I Y---', ',.' 't 1 .,-::: ""l',:i 1., :,:,,I,,. ' '''i r ' " ' ti ''- -:7,:. 1 ' ' ' .1 '' l' ''' I ' ' - .. '? ,...-P .1 ,- ???I--,., , - , ,,,, :J.,: /,:l: t-!. 1 : , ti : ,I, Q.,) . .1, ,',-!-;--7:1-7,-ff-' ?:,,;1',,?4", ? ''' V' I ' . 1, , ,,1-1-'.....a9--;; i j,{ .,,IV. :1,1'c6;?)...C.,1. ,... 11 ',,,,I.;'/il , . . :#?' ,./,1,;; , .. .. r:._, ,; , . ,:? -,--t-,i,ii '.'.; ..?,". -t.';';i'. _.,, , ,,:.. -.--;;?J 11. ti ', : ; Pt:?, .., :.... ...,,,-i..,.;..,_..::,.:. ,!?H?1Ittiii-,.!;;;." .;.,.,,.... :.!!'il.i:.: H Pm ? \,(;) ,--,-;:- 4, -.: i:?:1,,il ::: I.., - - (4.,,c, :7, ;-, ,,,, ".-:,?,, ?,-,J.;s:c.., ,I,-i , ,-,i.i.i., ...1,. ,,,,i-, ,, -: ? ? --? MUM: l?::77-"c? 7i ; i 1! ii - J,.;;:i I i.F-v.>x permits use of tables of natural logarithms or Poisson distributions for evaluation if (B3) is put in the form = N ? M ? (1 ? N = N ? M [i_ (1 ? N N M Li?e ?N/Mi (B5) The mean percentage of symbol over- lap a is thus ? -I a rz 100 {N M N/MJ 7.1 al 100 /1? N/M (116) which has been evaluated and plotted in Figure 5 of the text. Evaluation of the overlap distribution function. leads to iterative expressions which are impractical to evaluate except by use of a computer. While this was beyond the scope of the present investi- gation, it is evident that further effort in this area would yield useful data. The author would like to acknowledge the assi Ma-. st- ance of M. nnvirl XA _ Declassified in. Part-Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 ... es: Ellectrob:mineseent pan- , -panel oT light vanes, light ampli- lier Tioe ? "Crystal Bali" display. ?. .?.3dg panel Ose:.lating plan intersTiccs t.. 'ing, rods Characteristics (i)eormance parameters) ? "',i;iiii-ations ?.Size of CRT or projection screen, etc. (More properly known as b-r-'?nce) Litnitat.'ons ? Darkened nolarized lighting, broad band etc. .,::::asi)onse Time ? This could mean wridiv-, speed, frame time, target up- (.1L:ng.r, time. ? Ability to distinguish two s.--rnirrne -Targets is measured in many ,..vays. Capability ,Zata Copy Capaiiiity 8. Syn-thol Limitations' 5. Go!or and Halftone Capability Storage Conclusions V111:1;.; the foregoing attempt at dis- play categorization and classification is a(!?;ti-e.dly incomplete, it does serve to saft em.)basis from the usual designer's vicw.)3int to one which regards 'a dis- a black box performing certain lono. Once the desired functions bat de-ToTmined and performance then one can begin tole hardware. Pleae, note . . Terial represents the views anLnor only, and in releasing it the U.S. .Naval Research 7.....7.1:oraLory does not necessarily endorse C. TALMADGE, Head .....,:71ay Techniques Section Naval Research Lab. Vlashington, 1.)i.r.nne dant cle:!ien:7::ti at ;ca ae article The Detetmina- tion of Display Screen Size and Resolti- ?ion Perceptual Limitations by Mr. (Glenn E.) Whitham, (TD, Vol. 2. No. '65) he makes the state- "Tae equivalent 'number of line is, Of c3urse, one-half the number cleinen...: or raster lines.? This stfite- rue for c, chart or device hieb at:T..ally has line pairs spaced 111-,on the raster. isfowever, if -....-rnation than this rather limit- .. T.:.;piayed, resolution is some- .an . what you might expect. -.oder: used _L.4. 1. 'Trust more .z..; to his intentions in tn... ..-?ture. jouN SHAVIE.a, The Bunl:er-I.---,aimo Corp. Sierra Vista. Ariz. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved LDOGISUAT0-2? Err 11-2 c'Z'VAVJ 71 7.:\ZEUMiA,. High standards of quality in the ma- terials, construction and design of DIGISWITCH promote reliable, trouble- free performance, long life and excel- lent appearance. DIGISWITCH Thumbwheel Switches are available in six (6) different series offering the engineer maximum design flexibility. All are panel space savers ? modular constructed for simple, in- expensive mounting?human engi- 6r= L7-Z n. LIE '11-i-V neereci to increase operator efficiency ?and offer extensive codec: electrical output capabilities. Shown above (actual size), are MIN:- SWITCH*? the smallest thurnbwheel switch on the market; and the unique rapid-setting 40-position Series 600 DIGISWITCH. For a catalog on our Complete line ef DIGISWITCH and MINISWITCH write to: *Trademark C A Division of Enclave? Corporation 655 South Arroyo Parkway, Pasadena, Caljornia Phone: 213/449-3110 MAN1.02ACTURND UNDER PATENTS 3.089 923 AND 0191.72a OTHER ?AtIEN211 PINDING. for Release 2012/04/23 : CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 VI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 :;ton Station, N. and more tran- ,.. CT-displayed data from col-...7,er readouts, telemetry, capturod effectively ',zany today by prop- -, phot3graphic tech- r:,.coriiing, processing, choice of t..chnic,oes that ca be ied, singly or in combina- . -Ave any problem of handling ,-;uantities of data that moves tco faac for visual analysis. -2:.o..o..lechanisms' engineers and .13tographic scientists?now deliver- photographic hard copy systems :3-)ace. --"-? -tians?special- ;Taphically ...rid utilize in any quantities. ?roblerns Are Not The Same Gaof.pp::cation may require speed, aambar volume, another very high r..,-o..ntion, another economy. And, of course, many applications require all .nc,3 and more. Each requirement can by a sn,!cilic photographic tech- .Y..^ combination of techniqUes? .e1;,y chosen, properly combined, pro],-,er.y app:ied -by a specialist: ::;:lotolnee11-nisras is unique in the of ?qotog:aphic data processing b,:cause its capabilities include not just one bat a whole range of specialized technic:ues. indeed, its specialty may be said -..;c be integrating specialized 1:ech:.iques in unusual photographic syotern-.., for erlicicnt handling of greater and greater quantities of transient L'ata. 11CCOIN. rola Sono 04COONG PUN. EVOSuNE (WC EcKOunC Sioltiot LEN37 NEFLCE MONO. -? OSP'vo [ANODE N. Tu. Omorontm VON+. 1.0O3 fonokoo nOJEcOON PoCCISSIN4 5mo,, So. rirClolcsoaC POP. NO1.1. SUP", PAPER cunt, EtrcraoiTAIC CIOR091 ['Anon VINTON COotit COSINOSteor, COPY Cao NICEMPI CROIECOOn LENS CNOAC,ON LON. OC ESSE El PAU OFE Shown here is a diagram of Photo- mechanisms' DATASTAT II, a hard generator chat combines the son- .y of s'.-..ver halide photography the zneed and economy of elec- e,,. ..,nances are . your problem needs a similar ?Or. .,c;chniclues for an opti- o.utiGn. 17.7.r your copy of Photo- ocaao.:.L. cnaracteristics of photo- data handling systems. ' Whitham? submitted the following reply, in response to ID's request for his an.swer to Mr. Shaver's letter.-Ed. Mr. Shaver is indeed correct in point- ing out that the resolution of a line raster along the axis normal to the lines is degraded for arbitrary display subject material to a value less than indicated by consideration only of the line struc- ture. This resolution loss factor has been found by various experimental" 2, 4 and theoretical3 studies to lie in the range of 0.53 to 0.85, with 0.7 a good nominal figure. For obtaining a given value of display resolution the number of lines required is 1/0.7 or 1.4 times the num- ber of desired resolution elements along the axis normal to the lines. This cor- rection factor is commonly known as the Kell factor. Further discussion of this subject was included on page 10 of the paper by Dr. 7,;:antitative Measures of Zji.4)lay Characteristics which just preceeded my paper in the July/August 1965 issue of Information Display. ? GLENN E. WHITHAM Staff Engineer Raytheon Company Wayland, Mass. 1. R. D. Kell, A. V. Bedford, and' M. A. Trainer, "An experimental television sys- tem-the transmitter", Proc. I. R. E. Vol. 22, pp 1246-1265; November 1931. 2. A. V. Bedford, "Figure of merit for tele- vision performance" R. M. A. Eng., Vol. 2, pp. 5-7; November 1937. 3. H. A. Wheeler, A. V. Loughren, "The fine structure of television images", Proc. I. R. E., Vol. 26, pp. 540-575; May 1938. 4. Baldwin, "Subjective Sharpness of tele- vision images", Proc. I. R. E., Vol. 38, pp. 458-468, 1940. P.S. The second sentence of the last paragraph on page 17 of my paper should read, "Situation type data displays usually require a resolu- tion of about 1000 to 2000 ele- ments for adequate symbol resolu- tion and differential position dis- eriminability." Information requested We have been doing a considerable amount of work in the. field of electro- luminescent displays, and in the course of this work several product ideas have evolved in the area of nioving pointer and moving scale panel indicators. In order to determine the direction our product development work should take we are trying to collect as much information as possible on desirable char- acteristics of panel indicators, user pref- erences and requirements and the poten- tial value of electroluminescent displays in providing a useful product improve- ment. Any -information that you could sup- ply which would be helnful in this in- Declassified in Partz.Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA vestigation would be greatly appreciated, including suggestions of other possible sources of information. C. H. WArisinkw Industrial Products Manager Huyck Systems Co. Huntington Station Long Island, N.Y. We are presently engaged in a study of the graphic recording field for proc- ess control and laboratory usage; and are in erested in futiice trends in this area, Therefore, I would appreciate in- formation that you feel may be helpful to us. L. P. LANE Arthur D. Little, Inc. Cambridge, Mass. I am very inter--. d rn an area of the field in which i dad no reference con- tained in recent issues of your magazine. This is in the requirements, theory and/or construction of display and status boards posted manually from the rear. have seen several in operation in mili- tary installations but have never had the forethought to look into the manufactur- ing stage. Could I impose upon your good offices to look among your advertisers and con- tributors and to furnish me some con- tacts with technical competence in this particular. area. I will be very apprecia- tive of any assistance you can render in this search. HENRY D. BATEY Chief, Graphics ? - United Aircraft Corp. Systems Center Farmington, Conn. ID readers who can contribute de- sired information are urged to com- municate directly with the above cor- respondants - Ed. SID and Journal helpful . Both the activities of the Society for Information Display and the articles in Information Display are of great inter- est to me. Material presented in the Journal has contributed significantly to my knowledge and understanding of data display technology. ? It is my responsibility to design and implement the "Total Information Sys- tem", culminating in display design in the following categories: . 1. Large Area Display 2. Small Area Display 3. Desk Top Display The project in which I am engaged is designed to provide the company with a system in the 1970's that will be suit- able to the environment at that time. JOHN P. THOMPSON Director of Data Processing Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc. ? Nutley_ Nr.t -RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 ?? ? ?? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?-???? ? ? ?? ? ? ? ?? ? ?-? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? ? ? ? ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 STAND 2-128 SIT-STAND The illustrations show recommendations for angular mounting of visual displays such as PPI-type CRT's. These dimensions are only ap- proximate. They do, however, represent usable standards for about 90 per cent of the male population. -4 _4?,?,,,A0?44 1-1,":01e..e.41,.e,,,,. V ? ( 1LL." ..(* J-3:4 e Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 r ?L.) 5 ontmand centers we find for the e the need to read cathode-ray thsplays, projection displays, and hard e:py under the same level of illumina- tan Neithe: the illumination of thea- tees nor that of offices is suitable, the one being too low for reading papers t-,tttl the other to,) high for reading dis- plays. e. shows a method for corn- the at which both dis- - and ilard copy can be read with at ease, or conversely for showing he ativaotage given one data source over a., other by the use of a different level o ilittruination. Properties of displays o copy needed in the computation ore given, and a sample computation is presented. fit is shown that the com- puted value of illumination is both satis- factory and compatible with the recom- mendations of T.:no Illuminating Engineer- ing Society. Means for avoiding eye strain nod fatigue (applicable to any level of illumination) are restated. if a col-fp:nand or management center is to be successful, the human decision maker must receive all the assistance from his data sources that the state of tile art permits. To this end the display equipment, the hard copy, and the illu- mination must all be matched to the needs of the user. There is much infor- int.tion on the size,- shape, etc. of the symbols that should be presented, a great deal of information on the tech- nicplcs for producing and presenting the symbols, but very. little on the environ- ment in which the displays should oper- ate. This paper is an attempt to fill a major part of this gap?the illumination of the operating area. One may ask why this should be a serious question, since the subject of illumination has received so much at- tention in the last fifty years. The rea- son is that in command centers one finds for the first time that self luminous dis- plays?cathode ray tubes, electrolumines- cent panels, pn.ojection screens, etc. ? are combined with redeetive displays ? messages, on., operating plans, budg- e..:,, sehem.e. etc. ? with the require- ment that they be used in close sequence. fellows that the illumination must be at one time suitable for the electronic displays and for the hard copy. There is an extensive literature on the illumination of rooms for self-luminous displays, beginning with the data gath- ered by the then Society of Motion Pic- ture Engineers on the lighting of movie theaters. This art was adapted during the war for radar display rooms and other weapons control centers, and extended by use of narrow-band light to take ad- vantage of a color difference. The philos- ophy of minimum illumination is still seen in rooms where edge-lit, grease-pen- cil plots are kept. With the advent of brighter displays there came a demand that we "come up out of the caves" into an office atmosphere. 1ES Recommandations The recommendations of the IES (Il- luminating Engineering Society) "reflect .a consideration of many variables such as visual data, . . . economic factors, convenience, and availability." On ex- amination it is found that their visual data are based on reflective materials ? the reading of papers, the performance of shop tasks, etc. It has long been known that when such tasks are difficult because of poor form, extra fine lines, low contrast, etc. a higher level of il- lumination is helpful. It has been a long time since electric illumination has been expensive, and it is certainly con- venient and available. One must con- clude that there is no factor in the IES's considerations which exerts a strong in- fluence. toward lower illumination, and since they have no control over the qual- ity of material in view, it is quite proper that their recommendations be generous. Obviously, in a command center a compromise between these extremes is required, and the compromise must be pleasing to persons of high rank. With due attention to the opposite effect of illumination on reflective and self lumin- ous displays, a best illumination can be achieved, and at the present state of the art it will be a very satisfactory illumina- tion if the conditions are met with rea- sonable care. The Data It has long been known that the ease siem33/3/331 77-11 of seeing is related to the illumination, ? the size of the detail that must be seen, and to the contrast of that detail to the background; and various pairs of these variables have been studied parametrical- ly until the relations are well known. During an eight year research (as of 1959) Dr. H. Richard Blackwell has re- lated these four variables using the same group of observers. In these experiments the subjects faced a hollow box which covered a wide field of view and which was illuminated even- ly with white light. Near a reference mark on the back wall there was a translucent spot of white plastic which appeared the same brightness as the rest of the wall under the front illumina- tion, but which could be back illumi- nated to a higher level, and the equip- ment was so built that both brightnesses, the size of the spot, and the duration of its back illumination could be varied over wide ranges. The observers were thoroughly trained in practice runs not included in the data, to eliminate variation ascribable to learning. They sat before the. box for a sufficient time for their eyes to be- come adapted to the light level to be ? used; they were then told the limits of a time interval in which the spot might, or might not, have been back illuminated, and were asked to decide whether or not they had seen it. Since the same color light was used for the - background and the spot, the contrast could be computed -using the simple relation: where and ? Br, C = (1) B, C is the contrast B? is the higher of the two brightnesses B, is the lower of the two brightnesses This expression for contrast has a value which varies from zero to infinity, and (unlike some) it has the advantage that the zero value conforms to the condi- tion which has no visible contrast. Over 80,000- observations were made. For each set of conditions the data were INFORMATION DISPLAY, SEPT/OCT, 1964 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 1 "-//7- Tr 7. r7r-v r/ ;h./ / L-4 /7/7;f2/J' ii'IJI /77771 r s first cc:reeted for the known percentage of lucky guesses, then were fit to the normal ogive so that the 50% point (the point of maximum slope) could be de- termined with accuracy. The curves were Caen smoothed by the use of the known -:i.:rainetric ? rcliti- between pairs of of this proc- c.is it was found ;bat an introduced vari- ation as small as 2% would require an ob- vious violation of one of the parametric :elations. This work has been reported in various sages of progress, references 1, 2, and beibg the more important and carry- .; :eferences to the others. The corn- ma data, without some of the details 3C 'now they were gotten, are given in / rcierence 3. Because all the data came / iTora the same basic source, because all four variables are covered, and because of the care used in smoothing, it is felt Cnat the, results constitute an unusuallY useful statement of fact. To extend these data to the conditiont and requirements of practical seeing, Di. '2;1.1d:well uses the concept of field foe', tors by which to multiply the required contrast. A factor to compensate for the difference between skilled observers using fo:cod choice and the ordinary reader facing a new problem was determined experimentally. Factors for off-axis view- ing, for tile lack of warning, and for the f:equency of presentation were deter- mined experimentally. The latter three were checked with reasonable accuracy by use of a task evaluator, an instru-. mcnt whereby a task and a test spot could both be viewed under conditions of controlled contrast and that contrast r,:doced to minimum visibility. The development of the field factor concept is described in reference 3. The overall factor, as determined by the process described above, is in the range from 33 to 37. While the basic data are felt to be valid beyond doubt, the value of the :actors has been questioned, some ?.corkers feeling 'Chat the proposed values 1?_iiid to to- .?w a level of illumination. The author na:,. arbitrarily used an over- ::: value of 43- in making up his human 'ORMATIC,^, MSPLAY, SEPT/OCT, 1964 by A. C. STOCKER performance curves; however, it will be. shown later that the value of the field factor has no bearing on the selected illumination so long as the same value is used in the computations for both hard copy and self-luminous displays. The author has applied a field fac- tor (40) to ft-. :? ,.-crice 3 for detail subtendi.:g 2, and 4 minutes of arc, and for illuminations between 0.1 and 100 footcandles and has interpolated for easier use. The re- sulting curves are given as Figures 1, 2, and 3. 100- 30 10 100 70 50 33 20 E 3.3 FIG. HUMAN PERFORMANCE FIELD FACTORS- 40 LOG 0 RIGHTNESS Fl- I. Fig. Human performance when reading sym- bols with a stroke width (alpha) of one minute of arc. It must be stressed that the speeds shown in Figures 1, 2, and 3 are not reading speeds, but are the inverse of the times when the spot was back illuminated in the tests. The term "read- ing ease" was considered for a while, but it is hard to conceive of an ease of 100, so the term "relative perception. speed" was finally chosen. The Selection of an Illumination Level It is obvious that both the self-lumi- nous and the reflective displays must be readable; lacking other indication it will here be assumed that they should be equally readable. The optimum illu- mination level is, then, that which gives each the same relative perception speed. This may easily be found once the data are put in :the pTciiT r orm. The preparation oi data for reflective displays (hard copy) is simple. The steps are these: a) Determine the minimum size of detail that must be easily read- able, compute the angle this will subtend at the observer's eyes, and select the curve with this value of alpha. b) Determine the contrast of the ma- terial, and lay 'a straightedge across . the curve at this value. c) Multiply selected values of illu- mination by the reflectivity of the paper to establish the background brightness. d) For each value of brightness, read the relative perception speed. The preparation of data for the self- luminous type of display is a little more ,complex. The steps are these: a) Determine the minimum size of detail that must be easily read- able, compute the angle this will subtend at the observer's eyes, and select the curve for this value of alpha. ?b) Determine the excitation bright- ness available at the screen (that supplied by either the electron beam or the projector) and apply factors for the gain and loss of the screen to achieve the visible bright- ness of the symbols. C) Apply factors for the reflectivity of . . the screen, attenuation of its sup- port, the effectiveness of hoods, etc., to selected values of ambient illumination to determine the back- ground brightness. d) Compute the contrast from item' b) and c) above. (These computa- tions are discussed at greater length under Properties of Displays and Hard Copy.) e) For each value of illumination, lay 17 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 straightedge. across die curve at resultant contrast, and at the istirn?spooding value of background br:ghtliciss, read the relative per- eepnon speed. determine the optimum value of illumitaction, plot relative perception speeil vs. illumination for both types of ilisplav, It is obvious that one will have slope and one a negative; the where they cross is, then, the il- lumination at which the two types can be read widi equal ease. Li Displays is UI 11.1 Before the design of a command cen- ter enn oc started, it is necessary to have, at least an idea of the properties of the display materials that will be hsed therein. This section will discuss the properties of a representative sam- nle o; materials, and will discuss some et toe steps ken to assure good log,ibility. II:trd Copy-Hard Copy will long con- tinuo to carry a large and important por- t:on of the information needed in a center. Yet the information that avanable on the properdes of hard copy is very limited. The size of type, for is the size of the block on which the face is cut, not the size of the face and there are only very general atements on the reflectivity of papers ,ad iezs. For that reason a series of measurements was made. these measurements the symbol , et was taken as the prcpenderant :neight-i.: the word was in lower case, -Linen the height of -a lower case a, e, .o, :a or similar letter was measured. Some letters have a variable stroke width. However, ex-ocrience has shown that the intelligence is carried in the heavier por- tions of the symbol; it is in fact possible to read ?material in which a faulty re- production process has eliminated the thin strokes completely. So when a vari- able stroke width was encountered, the heavier portion of the stroke was meas- ured. These data were taken with a measuring microscope. The determination of reflectivity pre- sented a problem because of the small area available in the symbol and the knOW11 tendency of the human eye to be influenced by the surroundings. A series of paper chips varying from white to black were gotten by selecting from paper stocks where that was possible, and by dyeing to fill the gaps. These cidps were placed in a diffuse white il- lumination measured with a 'Weston II- :ui-nhaorner, their brightness was meas- ured with a Spectra Spot Brightness and their reflectivity was com- puted Tliese chips ctid then be corn- I directly to the paper of a display. l-ellectivity of symbols was deter- '.3y, placing, a chip partially across MATERIAL TABLE 1 PROPERTIES OF HARD COPY HEIGHT STROKE Angle @ 14" Mils Mils Mins Color R3fleot. Contrast Maps Army Map Service, NK 18-11 Paper white .65 Names-large 160 24 5.5 black .07 8.3 small 40 9 5.2 Highways 38 9.5 rci & blk high Railroads 7 1.7 black Creeks 5 1.2 blue .1 5.5 ? Contours 5 '1.2 tan fair Elevations 52 7 1.7 Sectional Air Chart, Winston Salem Paper Color wash to indicate ground altitude, Est. Avg. 50 Names-large 110 20 5 black .1 4 small 44 7 1.7 Smallest print 40 8 2 Highways 25 5.5 gray .3 Est. .6 Scale tics 8 2 Contours 9 2 tan kir Nautical Chart, H.O. 1290 Paper Names-large 144 small 40 Smallest print 24 Depth contours Soundings 60 14 10 5 5 9 Geological Survey, Redmond, Washington Paper Green Names-large 120 15 small 60 10 Smallest print 45 7 Highways 25 Roads dual 6 Creeks 8 Contours 5 Office Material Good pulp paper Average pulp paper Yellow copy paper Typewriter samples Paper Make A Electric Make B Elite Make B Pica Make B Pica-old ribbon ? Teletype printer ? Paper With new ribbon , With old ribbon, top With old ribbon, bottom Computer Printer output Make C Make D Make E As a basis for comparison- New York Times ? Paper Text Office Copiers Make F (translucent material) , Paper-on dark desk Print Paper-on white paper Print Make G (opaque material) Paper Print Pencil Pulp paper Mechanical pencil, .032" lead, HB ? 2H newly sharpened 2H fairly dull B newly sharpened. B dull white .65 3.5 black .09 6.2 2.5 1.2 1.2 1.2 white .7 overprint for wooded areas 3.7 black .1 6 2.5 1.7 5.5 red & blk hich 1.5 2 blue goad 1.2 tan fair .7 .65 .5 .7 110 15 3.7 black .1 6 110 10 2.5 black .12 4.8 114 10 2.5 black .1 6 114 7 1.7 gray .15 3.7 gray .6 105 20 5 black .1 5 12 2.7 black .12 4 Indef. .2 2 95 9 2.2 black .08 7.9 100 10 2.5 black .1 6 100 17 4.2 black .08 7.1 .46 55 10 2,5 black .1 3.6 .45 .12 2.3 .65 .12 4.4 .65 .10 5.5 .65 20 5 black .2 3.3 10 2.5 black .25 2.3 15 3.7 12 2.7 black .12 4.5 40 10 INFORMATION DISPLAY, SEPT/OCT, 1964. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy A at tvpe and examining the type ,:le edge of ,he chip through a low .eer inietoscopo, the microscope magni- , where red.s, pencil 111('::?;;11"OCI tO C011 as under the good mate- be prevent be an diffuse point made. example, light Some had to to pproved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 the hood factor can be changed from tiyity must be used with care. The quantitative relations follow, oil 0.5 to 0.25 by this means. After these steps, the direct ambient based on the fundamental relations that: light will be reduced to the point where the light reflected from the equipment, from white shirts, etc., becomes im- portant. Such secondary sources can be objectionable when they are specularly reflected from the tube face and appear as unwanted images superposed on the data. Glossy finishes should not be used on equipment, furniture, etc.; a medium gray mat surface is much less objection- able. Such light as remains can be ren- dered innocuous by etching the tube face to a fine mat surface. This is not truly a non-reflecting coating?it merely spreads the reflection over such a large area that the brightness is reduced and the shape of the source obscured. It is, however, a very effective step. Circular polarizer use A circular polarizer can be used for the functions of the filter glass and the mat first surface, either for better per- formance or when the desired proper- ties cannot be had in the available tube. It is not a complete cure, for it itself has bright specular reflection .from its front surface. However, it may be used as a plane surface, and the range of in- cident angles that gives objectionable reflections from a plane surface is much less than the .range that gives reflections from a spherical surface. Proction displays can also take ad- vantafarption in the screen sup- port, of a hood, of .directive room light, and (in some types) of a mat front ? surface on the screen. In addition, they can take advantage of directivity. Directive screens reflect (or transmit) more light in a preferred direction than in other directions. They therefore are. said to have "gain", this being the ratio of the brightness in the preferred direc- tion to the brightness of a highly diffu- sive screen subject to the same illumina- tion. Values between 2 and 10 are com- mon. If the viewers can be located along the preferred axis, the brightness of the data symbols will be increased while that from light sources not near the projector will be decreased, and an increase in con- trast will result. This effect reaches its peak in rear projection screens, where the steps which decrease the diffusion of the projected light- also decrease the reflectivity to ambient light, and where it is possible to take advantage of 4 filter- ing support material. However, a fundamental characteris- tic of gain is its sensitivity to changes in angle. Assuming the plane of the screen is correct for the location of the pro- jector and the center of the audience, there will still be a change in brightness due to looking at different portions of the screen or to the viewer's moving about the room. If this change is to be held within acceptable bounds, then direc- soteeder rcelection. The data gathered in these tests are given in Table 1. Special attention is invited to the data on office copying nee2liihos, pencil copy, and typewriter and teletype output. It will be noted thatnut contrast can be raised mate- rially, and in some cases the Width of the s,roke iriereased by a significant fac- tor, by the proper selection of equipment materials and the use of fresh rib- bons. One must conclude that the leg- ibility of the hard copy is to that ex- tent a function of the interest shown by the members of the staff. ? Sell-Luminous Displays?Self-luminous -lays?cathode ray tubes and projec- on screens?must combat the ambient eu:na:ion, so much of this section will have; to do with means for maintaining good contrast. The light in the symbol, the light that carries the useful informa- tion, comes from either an electron beam or a proector; we will consider cathode toy tees 'Rather than get into a discussion of ?ducts, the author will here assume that ,he tube has a beightness of 50 t-Itemberrs available at the phosphor, ci offers assurance that this level is with- in the state of the art using crystalline phosphors. The reflectivity of the phos- phor is assumed to be 85(;6, highly diffu- sive. The problem, :then, is to achieve as good contrast as is possible with this device. The first step to consider is the use ?of a gray glass for the face plate of the tube. It is true that such glass reduces the brightness of the symbols. by the transmission (filter factor) of the glass. But the ambient illumination must pass through the glass twice, so the contrast is. increased by the inverse of the filter factor. This can be a significant amount; RCA lists face plates with filter factors in two groups, one near 0.75 and one near 0.4. The next step is the use of a cap-bill hood to keep as much as possible of the ambient illumination from falling on the screen.. Properly designed, such a hood can easily have a factor of 0.5 without e,esitic,ing the viewing angle. The effectiveness of a hood may be :creased by limiting the angles at which the figat appeoaches the equipment, as can be done by hanging properly de- gned honeycomb gratings below the ii5bt sources. The light can still come :rem the ......for portion of the .ceiling, so it is fehy chifuse (or indirect); it is mere- ly to those angles which will not get uneer the hood. It is believed that ION DISPLAY, SEPT/OCT, 1964 BL B = I R L, I? =- For hard copy: B? = Re A B, = Rr substituting in (1)? c R? ? R, RE For both cathode-ray tubes and pro- jection screens the brightness of tile sym- bol is the sum o: te..t produced by the intended excitation and that of the back- ground as produced by stray electrons or the transmission of "opaque" parts of the film. For cathode-ray tubes: B5, = B115 T eee Ia Rpi, T2 + Be T substituting in (1) C T ? Be For front projection: Bil =AG B, = Be + Be G Here Be is the sum of the brightnesses due to the individual room illuminants, each with the value of gain required by its. angles. This is so complex that the value is usually determined by measure- ments on a mockup or on the final as- sembly. (1) (2) 3) (4) substituting in (1) L?G C A (Be + Be G) For rear...projection, with the diffusing layer on the projector side of tlie screen: ? In A 13, = Be + Be GT B? = I, Rs T2 A single expression for B. is made pos- sible here by the small difference in reflectivity for the angles of the differ- ent room illuminants. substituting in (1) L?G C = A(I?RsT BeG) In the above: A = Area of the projection screen, in square feet. B = Brightness, in foot-lamberts. B. = Brightness due to the ambient illumination. 135/ = The higher of two brightnesses. 13, = The lower of two brightnesses. Bo, = Brightness of a phosphor due Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 :19 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 to lectron impact or other ex- cianion. = brightness due to unintentional excitation, as by stray electrons or transmission through the "opaque" areas of the film. - Contrast = The gain of a projection screen for the incident and reflected angles involved. Note - com- mercial values for G usually include the reflectivity, so it is not stated separately. = An illumination, in footcandles. ___ The ambient illumination. - The projected illumination. ? - The light flux delivered to the sceen by the projector, in Lu- mens. = The reflectivity. The reflectivity of the paper. The refHctivity of the ink. A.-c..iectivity of the phos- mor. - The reflectivity of the projec- tion screen. = The transmission (filter factor) of the screen support where he support is between the screen and the observer. in order to demonstrate the process and to get a feeling for the level of ..arnivation the process will indicate, a sample calculation was carried through using the nearest value of alpha for which there was a curve available (Figures 1, 2, and 3.) For hard copy, an Army Map Service :Lap, two typewriters with different weight of type face, a teletype machine, and a. mechanical. pencil were taken as representative of the materials that might be found in a military command center. 100 10 FIG. 2 HUMAN PERFORMANCE ? 2' FIELD FACTORS - 40 100 70 SO 33 V. 20 o- 15 10 7 3.3 2 LOG ? BRIGHTNESS FT - L Fig. 2 Human performance when reading sym- bols with a stroke width (alpha) of two minutes of arc. The results of the computation are given in Table 2 and plotted in Figure 4. For the display, a cathode ray tube was chosen and assumedto have a phos- phor with a brightness of 50 foot-lam- berts and a reflectivity of 0.85. Filter factors of 0.4 or 0.75 were used, alpha was taken as 2' or 4', and the hood fac- tor was taken as 0.5 or 0.25. These con- ditions can also be met in. a projection display if the screen size is properly bal- anced to the available projected light.. The results of the calculation are given 100 30 1 ria 3 HUMAN PERFORMANCE = 4' FIELD FACTORS - 40 8 0 70 33 20 15 LOG BRIGHTNESS FT - L Fig. 3 Human performance when readIng sym- bols with a stroke width (alpha) of four minutes of arc. EFFCCT or ILLUMINATION PERCEPTION SPEED HARD COPY AF,1> -.M?V - SOO Fig. 4 The effect of illumination on human perception speed when reading hard copy. Jin AMS Map TABLE 2 READABILITY OF HARD COPY Typewriter Typewriter Make A Make B Paper Refl. Contrast Min. Alpha Mins. .65 8.3 2 .7 6 4 .7 6 2 Tel Pencil H3 .032" lead 5 4 .6 ,7 3.3 4 lllemination ft-candle Speed? B Speed* Speed* 1 .65 2.7 .7 14.5 .7 .6 2 1.3 5.8 1.4 22 1.4 3.2 1.2 4 2.6 8.3 2.8 35 2.8 5.5 2.4 8 5.2 13 5.6 45 5.6 7.7 4.8 12 7.8 16.5 8.4 55 8.4 9.7 7.2 20 13 21 14 63 14 13 12 40 26 28 28 75 28 17 24 CD 52 35 56 90 56 23 48 100 65 33 70 96 70 25 60 7C-Xt ic,r meaning. Speed* 10.5 16 25 35 42 48 62 73 80 Speed* .7 6.2 1.4 10 2.8 14.8 5.6 21 8.4 26 14 33.3 28 40 56 47 70 50 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 a larger symbol M the number of SAM- Ca: be presented on a given e screen. The specification writer is 66X'd Wi 6:1 a co.f.prornise, which he must Ide with the knowledge that the sclec- don of a too-small symbol will impose a 'penalty in legibility, and that this pen- 66' will haVe '66) be paid day after day Ly the commander and his staff. The display plotted in curve "B" of Figure 5 and the Army map were then ? selected as representing the displays that might be considered the critical pair in NOMC fictitious command center, and their curves were replotted in Figure 6. It is obvious that their crossing point speci- fies the illumination at which the critical " 60 71,66 St( 73667 3 G EFFLLT or tLLL/FI,NAT iON PcNCEFIT1ON SPEED D:LPL,S 4 166,773,1106 r t ,66066 :6; :Aumination on human spuc,i when reading self- .0 dus hard copy and the critical display can - read with equal ease. should be stated again that the speed scale is not the reading speed, but merely a way of achieving compari- son. Fflter Factor Symbol B ft-L Alpha Minutes Hood Factor . Bockgd. B ft-candle ft-L 1 .063 2 0.136 4 0.272 3 0.542, 2 3.316 20 1.36 40 2.72 80 5.44 -.03 6.8 0.4 20 4 .5 Several things can be learned from Figure 6. For one, it is possible that either class of display can be improved. The brightness of the cathode ray tube may be increased or the suppression of the ambient illumination improved; the map may be printed on better paper, or its contrast may be-increased by a change of ink. The interesting point is that any improvement will raise the curve for that display, and if the value of illumination is adjusted to suit, the ease of reading of both displays will be improved. Second, it must be recognized that it will sometimes not be possible, or per- haps desirable, to use the value of illu- mination that the computation calls for. 70 60 10 10 SELECTION OF ILLUN INATION LEVEL 67 -.71101.1 " 100 Fig. 6 The selection of an optimum illumina- tion for reading both hard copy and self-luminous displays is accomplished when the relative perception speeds are equal. On such an occasion the plot offers numerical indication of the advantage given one type of display and the pely alty imposed on the other by the requir6d level of illumination. TABLE 3 READABILITY OF DISPLAYS Phosphor Brightness, 50 ft-L; Reflectivity, 85% And third, the small crosses marked 25 and 60 represent the crossing points of two other sets of curves for the same displays but based on human per- formance curves in which the field fac- tors were taken as 25 and 60. The three crossings indicate the same value of illu- mination to within the accuracy with which the performance curves can be read and their plot smoothed; it must be concluded that the Value of the field factor has no bearing on the computed value of illumination sb long as the same factor is used in the computations for both self-luminous displays and hard copy. Suitability of the Computed Illumination Since the computed level of illumina- tion is markedly lower than the general recommendations of the Illmninating En- gineering Society for offices, it is proper to question whether or not it is suit- able. This must be asked in two parts -is it sufficient? and is it pleasing? Many years ago a number of observ- ers were given control of the illumina- tion and were asked to find the value that was best for reading the Saturday Evening Post. The reported values fol- low:6 Available value of illu- mination, foot candles 10 30 45 hosen value 5 12 16 e very human tendency to choose middle value is apparent, and it must be remembered that the observers were accustomed to a lower level of illumina- 0.4 20 20 2 .5 0.4 20 2 .25 0.75 37.5 2 .5 EL- 0.75 37.5 2 .25 Backgd. Backgd, Backgd. Backgd. B B B B C Speed ft-L C Speed ft-L C Speed* ft-L C Speed* ft.!. C Speed 294 .068 294 .034 0.239 156 0.119 315 147 0.136 147 .068 294 0.478 78.5 51 0.239 156 73.6 101 0.272 73.6 33 0.136 147 0.956 39.2 36 0.478 78.5 51 36.8 87 0.544 36.8 25 0.272 73.6 33 1.91 19.6 27 0.956 39.2 36 24.5 76 0.816 24.5 19.5 0.408 49 28 2.87 13 19 1.44 26 31 14.7 60 1.36 14.7 13.5 0.68 29.4 23 4.78 7.85 12 2.39 15.7 23 7.36 42 2.72 7.36 7.9 1.36 14.7 13.5 9.56 3.92 4.8 4.78 7.85 12 3.68 25 5.44 3.68 3.1 2.72 7.36 7.9 19.1 1.96 9.56 3.92 4.8 2.94 19.5 6.8 2.94 1.6 3.4 5.89 6.2 23.9 1.57 11.9 3.15 3.3 C.Jrve :n A for rn-::c.ning. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 tlimi are we today. However, it is ..so apparent that there is no pressing immail need for high levels when the contrast is good. ? Anti in their work on the utility of colored illumnionts, Feree and Rand' Itssfed tile eyes of their observers both :,,:ort' and after reading for three hours in Table 3 and plotted in Figure 5. Tile difference. between curve "A" our minutes of arc) and the other carves (two minutes) is notable. One is iempted to say that a stroke width oi ;our minutes should always be used. with a colored illumination of only 0.3 ft-candle. There was a measurable loss, hr., the significant fact is that it was possible to read for that time with an metlesirable light and at such a low level. Grie must conclude, then, that the corn- 'a: ted hovel of illumination is above the inininfien by a factor of at least forty, marl that it is in a range that has been salected as oe. :num in tests where the observer could control the level of illu- mint, don. .s clear from the above data that the commuted level of illumination is suifleient, but that does not assure that it will be pleasing. The reason why it nary be one avid not the other is that the eve does not see illumination?it sees rho iirig1rt?ess of the work and its sur- roMidings that result from that illumina- fiGn. Tha sources of illumination should be distriouted, but not evenly distributed. Completely diffuse illumination creates a somnolent atmosphere, while the in- clusion of some concentration points helps seeing through the formation of -the shadows by which form is perceived. And of course no light source whose brig,ifiness is materially higher than that of the walls should be 'within the field of views of the operating people. The ratio of brightnesses within the field of view should be low. This effect is most easily achieved by using the same finish for similar objects and keeping the illumination reasonably even. Such vari- ation in brightness as exists should follow as. closely as possible the rule that the ceiling be brightest, the walls next bright, the furniture and equipment next, and the floors least bright, but not dark. The ...ES recommends that the reflectivities be walls, 0.5; furniture and equipment, ? 0.35, and floors, 0.3. It should be noted that hard copy, with a paper reflectivity bear 0.7 and ink reflectivity near 0.1, will have good contrast within itself with- out either the paper or the ink being markedly different from its surroundings. Wall projection screens present a prob- lem because rue symbol brightness is and L is necessary to achieve the contrast by keeping the back- .ound dark. Hence, the screen must ha cai-c.2-olly screened from all room Declassified in lights. However, the area immediately around the screen must be as bright as the rest of the wall. This surrounding area can be illuminated by highly direc- tive lights, it can be back lighted, it can be set back of the screen and illuminated by lights behind the screen, it can be made fluorescent and excited by ?ultra- violet light, etc. When done properly the symbols will be brighter than the walls and the background darker; the presence of the -walls will make the screen appear to have a greater contrast than it actually has, and at the same time will maintain the balance of bright- ness with the rest of the room. A clear -and public example of the effectiveness of balanced brightness is available in the two reading rooms of the Congressional Library in Washington. The old reading room in the main build- ing is equipped with dark fdrniture. At night the walls are relatively dark, and the darkness of the ceiling is relieved only by an illuminated painting. Lights over the desks illuminate only the writ- ing surface. In the day the walls are much brighter, but the windows to the south and the spots of sunlight to the north make severe glare spots. Study in this room is very tiring, eye strain set- ting in after an hour or two. The reading room in the Annex is illuminated with artificial sources only, using desk lights similar to those in the old room plus in- direct illumination. The ceiling is the brightest part of the room, the walls are next bright, and the furniture is relatively light. There are no glare spots. One can study for hours in this room without fatigue. The comparison is strik- ing proof of the desirability of a low ratio of brightnesses; it is even more striking when one realizes that the illu- mination on the writing surfaces in the two rooms is the same.. It is clear, then, that the process out- lined in this paper provides equal ease of reading for both hard copy and dis- plays, that the resultant illumination is entirely adequate, and that it can be made pleasing. There remains only the . problem of those officers who normally work in brightly lit offices and who must move to the command center on the oc- casion of an alert. Luckily the computed illumination for the command center is less than that to be expected in offices by a factor of only three to six. It is felt that a smooth transition can be made possible by setting the illumination of the intervening halls and anteroom at a value intermediate between those of the offices and the command center. As in most system studies, this work shows that much can be done by a num- ber of small steps taken together. . It must be noted that one of these steps, that of providing a limited range of brightnesses, has long been known but has frequently been overlooked. There is no easy way to compute the effectiveness of hoods, means for direct- ing the illumination, etc. One solution is to make the display contractor respon- sible for the entire installation and ,to provide time and funds for either a mockup or extensive tests in location. An approach that would save the cost of repeated mockups is for the Government to make the tests, to provide a suitable room, to specify the design of the hoods, and to relieve the contractor from re- sponsibility for the contrast. Conclusions a) The described process readily gives the illumination level at which hard copy and self-luminous displays are equally readable, or gives a quantitative state- ment of the advantage given one data source over the other when a different il- lumination level used. b) The current art for cathode-ray dis- plays permits an adequate level of illu- mination if known techniques for main- taining contrast are used. The same is true for projection displays if the screen area is reasonable c) This level of illumination will be pleasing if the color of the ceiling, walls, furniture, equipment, and floors, and the distribution of illumination gives .. a small range of brightness with a proper distribution of brightness. d) The values for the contrast of hard copy given herein should be re-examined. If the listed values are low, then correct values will permit a new selection of il- lumination with which both the hard -copy and the displays can be read more easily. If the listed values are correct; then similar values can be used in future display specifications with a financial sav- ing for the customer.0 REFERENCES 1. Blackwell, H. Richard "Use of Perform- ance Data to Specify Quantity and Qual- ity of Interior Illumination." /lluininating Engineering June 1955, p. 286-299, 2. Blackwell, H. Richard and McCready, Donald W. Jr. Foveal Contrast Thresh- olds for Various Durations of Single Pulses. Prepared June 1958 for BuShips, U.S. Navy, under contract Nobs-72038. Copies available from Institute for Re- search in Vision, The Ohio State Univer- sity Research Center, 1314 Kinnear Road, Columbus 12, Ohio. 3. Blackwell, H. Richard "Development and Use of a Quantitative Method for the Specification of Interior Illumination Lev- els on the Basis of Performance Data." Illuminating Engineering June 1959, p. 317-332. 4. IRS Handbook, 3rd Edition, 1959. 5. "Recommendations for Quality and Quan- tity of Illumination." Report No. 1, I.E.S. Committee on Recommendations. Illu- minating Engineering, August, 1058, p. 423. 0.. "Value of Higher Intensities of Illumina- tion." Jour. Amer. Institute of Electrical Engineering 41:499, July, 1922. 7. Force, C. E. and Rand, G. "Visibility of Objects as Affected by Color and Corn- posion of Light. Personnel factual 10:108-124 (July, 1931). INFORMATION DISPLAY, SEPT/OCT. OtSzt Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 instrument panel layout ? instrument -priority and position INSTRUMENT PRIORITY, POSITION, VIEWING ANGLE, .,ND -DISTANCE . _ --- - . ? (-:7-- th Optimum Position: In general,. optirmlm_loca.tion,fornstruments ia diFely ' jaaLore the operator froal_aya_l.eyel to about 3e-b-alow eye level dt.T7 oi-Otrer'Vent'fe-wratora,-tTe-OPti'MUM1.-Otaticen-iS'JUSt benW e windshield. The most important.and frequently'used instruments should be placed in this ,most favorable area. Instruments used for controlling direction (such as aircraft heading indicators) are preferably located directly ahead of the operator. If there are two or more such direction instruments they are pre- ferably arranged along a vertical line. . Viewing Angle: The most favorable angle for viewing instruments is perpendicular to the dial faces. Extremely oblique viewing angles should be avoided by angling the ends, bottom or top of large panels. Viewing angles up to 45? are considered .X.s.aticfac_tory, provided needed information on the dial is not obscured by the bezel, lighting shield, or other obstruction, and if some loss of reading pre- cision due to parallax can be tolerated. ? Viewing Distance: Viewing distance for .instrument panels need be limited only ...if the operator is required to manipulate knobs 'or switches on the panel from ' his normal seated position. This distance is normally. fixed at 28. inches from the eyes for vertical panels. The instrument size must be increased propor- tionally.for longer viewing distances. . ? Horizontal and Vertical Separation: The difficulty of shifting between instruments increases with separation. distance. Vertical eye movements are more difficult than horizontal shifts in fixation. Distance between instruments . should be minimized. Horizontal separations are preferred to vertical separa- tions. (Fitts and Simon, 1952.) -7-:12. ' LIA eft WADC TR 54-160 ?Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/04/23: CIA-RDP78B04770A001900020031-7 e,4