Unresolvable Pixels Contribute to Character Legibility: Another Reason Why High-Resolution Images Appear Clearer

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Abstract

This study examined the effect of character sample density on legibility. As the spatial frequency component important for character recognition is said to be 1 to 3 cycles/letter (cpl), six dots in each direction should be sufficient to represent a character; however, some studies have reported that high-density characters are more legible. Considering that these seemingly contradictory findings could be compatible, we analyzed the frequency component of the character stimulus with adjusted sample density and found that the component content of 1 to 3 cpl increased in the high-density character. In the following three psychophysical experiments, high sample density characters tended to have lower contrast thresholds, both for normal and low vision. Furthermore, the contrast threshold with characters of each sample density was predicted from the amplitude of the 1 to 3 cpl component. Thus, while increasing the sample density improves legibility, adding a high frequency is not important in itself. The findings suggest that enhancing the frequency components important for recognizing characters by adding the high-frequency component contributes to making characters more legible.

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Ohnishi, M., & Oda, K. (2020). Unresolvable Pixels Contribute to Character Legibility: Another Reason Why High-Resolution Images Appear Clearer. I-Perception, 11(6). https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669520981102

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