Visual discomfort and glare assessment in office environments: A review of light-induced physiological and perceptual responses

View/ Open
File version
Accepted Manuscript (AM)
Author(s)
Hamedani, Zahra
Solgi, Ebrahim
Skates, Henry
Hine, Trevor
Fernando, Ruwan
Lyons, Joshua
Dupre, Karine
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Lighting in office environments has many benefits, ranging from decreasing energy consumption to enhancing human health and well-being. However, visual discomfort such as glare has a negative impact on occupants, causing a sensation of annoyance or pain, thereby reducing user satisfaction and productivity. Current methods and metrics established for evaluating glare are mainly derived from physical measurements of luminance distribution and conventional subjective evaluations. However, significant inconsistencies and inaccuracies reported by a number of comparative studies highlight the need for a more objective method in ...
View more >Lighting in office environments has many benefits, ranging from decreasing energy consumption to enhancing human health and well-being. However, visual discomfort such as glare has a negative impact on occupants, causing a sensation of annoyance or pain, thereby reducing user satisfaction and productivity. Current methods and metrics established for evaluating glare are mainly derived from physical measurements of luminance distribution and conventional subjective evaluations. However, significant inconsistencies and inaccuracies reported by a number of comparative studies highlight the need for a more objective method in the derivation of glare indices. This paper reviews the existing literature to provide a holistic overview of implemented methods in measuring light-induced physiological responses to objectify perceived glare. Physiological responses investigated within the reviewed literature include: pupil size, eye movement, gaze direction, degree of eye-opening, and blink rate. Research outcomes regarding each individual response are then analysed based upon their experimental methodology, the metric utilized for their analysis, and confounding variables that may contribute to misleading results. Through this analysis, established factors and those requiring further evidence are identified.
View less >
View more >Lighting in office environments has many benefits, ranging from decreasing energy consumption to enhancing human health and well-being. However, visual discomfort such as glare has a negative impact on occupants, causing a sensation of annoyance or pain, thereby reducing user satisfaction and productivity. Current methods and metrics established for evaluating glare are mainly derived from physical measurements of luminance distribution and conventional subjective evaluations. However, significant inconsistencies and inaccuracies reported by a number of comparative studies highlight the need for a more objective method in the derivation of glare indices. This paper reviews the existing literature to provide a holistic overview of implemented methods in measuring light-induced physiological responses to objectify perceived glare. Physiological responses investigated within the reviewed literature include: pupil size, eye movement, gaze direction, degree of eye-opening, and blink rate. Research outcomes regarding each individual response are then analysed based upon their experimental methodology, the metric utilized for their analysis, and confounding variables that may contribute to misleading results. Through this analysis, established factors and those requiring further evidence are identified.
View less >
Journal Title
BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume
153
Copyright Statement
© 2019 Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence, which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
Subject
Design
Architecture
Architectural science and technology
Building