Abstract

Summary

This study investigates whether colour (red/blue contrast) can modulate pupil size via melanopsin-driven ipRGC pathways during covert attention tasks, extending beyond luminance-only models of pupillary control. Results suggest colour can meaningfully improve performance in pupil-based human-computer interfaces, pointing to practical design opportunities in assistive technology and attention-sensitive lighting systems.
Abstract

Key Findings

  • Colour (red/blue contrast) produced a clear improvement in Human Machine Interface performance compared to a luminance-only version, though results were not fully conclusive regarding covert attention modulation of pupil size by colour alone.
  • Melanopsin in ipRGCs, which shows wavelength-dependent sensitivity, is implicated as at least partially responsible for the observed pupillary and attentional effects of chromatic stimuli.
  • A Posner cueing task was used to probe covert attention effects; colour-based cues showed detectable differences in pupil dilation patterns compared to non-colour conditions.
Categories

Categories

The Science of Light: Investigates melanopsin/ipRGC contributions to pupillary light response and covert attention modulation by chromatic (red/blue) stimuli.
Eye Health & Vision: Examines pupil size dynamics in response to colour contrasts, with implications for visual processing and attention-linked pupillary responses.
Authors

Author(s)

R De Cecilio de Carlos
Publication Date

Publication Year

2019
Citations

Number of Citations

1
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