July 24, 2025
Journal Article

Relative contributions of sc-DER, mel-DER, color rendition, chromaticity, and illuminance to spatial brightness perception

Abstract

An experiment was conducted to examine spectrally based factors that contribute to the visual perception of interior environments, with a focus on brightness perception. Thirty-two participants evaluated 60 different lighting scenes in a mock office. The lighting spectral power distributions varied systematically in illuminance, chromaticity (CCT and Duv), s cone opic daylight efficacy ratio (sc-DER), melanopic daylight efficacy ratio (mel-DER), and color rendition (Rf, Rg, and Rcs,h1). Illuminance had the largest effect on brightness perception. Notably, the second largest effect was due to changes in red chroma (Rcs,h1). The effect of sc-DER was also statistically significant but was a tertiary effect. The effects of mel-DER, CCT, and Duv were not statistically significant. This large effect of red chroma is consistent with the existing understanding that changes in color perception are often perceived when illuminance changes. With appropriate changes in color rendition and other factors held constant, spatial brightness perception was preserved through a decrease from 500 lux to 250 lux.

Published: July 24, 2025

Citation

Royer M.P., B.K. Abboushi, and E. Rodriguez-Feo Bermudez. 2025. Relative contributions of sc-DER, mel-DER, color rendition, chromaticity, and illuminance to spatial brightness perception. LEUKOS - The Journal of the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America 21, no. 3:309-331. PNNL-SA-191755. doi:10.1080/15502724.2024.2434977

Research topics