Too Bright to Focus? Influence of Brightness Illusions and Ambient Light Levels on the Dynamics of Ocular Accommodation
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Rodán, Antonio; Fernández-López, Angélica; Vera Vílchez, Jesús; Montoro, Pedro R.; Redondo Cabrera, Beatriz; Prieto, AntonioEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Accommodation Brightness illusion Pupil size
Date
2025-09-30Referencia bibliográfica
Rodán, A.; Fernández-López, A.; Vera, J.; Montoro, P.R.; Redondo, B.; Prieto, A. Too Bright to Focus? Influence of Brightness Illusions and Ambient Light Levels on the Dynamics of Ocular Accommodation. Vision 2025, 9, 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/vision9040081
Résumé
Can brightness illusions modulate ocular accommodation? Previous studies have shown
that brightness illusions can influence pupil size as if caused by actual luminance increases.
However, their effects on other ocular responses—such as accommodative or focusing
dynamics—remain largely unexplored. This study investigates the influence of brightness
illusions, under two ambient lighting conditions, on accommodative and pupillary dynamics (physiological responses), and on perceived brightness and visual comfort (subjective
responses). Thirty-two young adults with healthy vision viewed four stimulus types (blue
bright and non-bright, yellow bright and non-bright) under low- and high-contrast ambient
lighting while ocular responses were recorded using a WAM-5500 open-field autorefractor.
Brightness and comfort were rated after each session. The results showed that high ambient
contrast (mesopic) and brightness illusions increased accommodative variability, while
yellow stimuli elicited a greater lag under photopic condition. Pupil size decreased only
under mesopic lighting. Perceived brightness was enhanced by brightness illusions and
blue color, whereas visual comfort decreased for bright illusions, especially under low light.
These findings suggest that ambient lighting and visual stimulus properties modulate both
physiological and subjective responses, highlighting the need for dynamic accommodative
assessment and visually ergonomic display design to reduce visual fatigue during digital
device use.





