Three perception experiments were conducted to develop a measure for predicting the visibility of the stroboscopic effect occurring in temporally modulated light systems. In the first experiment, different methodologies were evaluated for their measurement error. In the second experiment, the visibilities of the stroboscopic effect for square wave and sine wave light modulations were measured and the results were found to be consistent with previous findings for flicker perception. In the third experiment, specifically crafted, complex waveforms were used to test the theory of frequency summation. Based on the results of these three experiments, a new measure for the visibility of the stroboscopic effect was developed, consisting of a summation of the energy in all frequency components, normalized for human sensitivity.
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The stroboscopic visibility measure (SVM) is a method used to quantify the stroboscopic effect visibility in general illumination application. SVM has been defined previously based on a limited number of frequencies and participants. To validate and extend SVM, five perception experiments are presented, measuring the visibility threshold of light waveforms modulated at several frequencies, conducted in two different labs. A power function is fitted through the aggregated results to develop a stroboscopic effect contrast threshold function for a "standard observer," which can be used to normalize SVM. An additional experiment shows the dependency on illumination level, extending the validity of SVM to other applications.
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