PSYCH of Light
PSYCH of Light
PSYCH of Light
Abstract
Light is the stimulus that influences most the human perception, but also the psychophysical wellbeing of the individual in everyday life. This paper analyzes the light from a psychological point of
view, investigating the relationships between light-based emotions and behaviours, and the psychophysical responses to lit environment by the perceivers in different experiential contexts.
Light becomes, therefore, Cognitive Map and Emotional Driver, but also a Gestaltic Device for
the perceiver, in order to understand and interpret the external reality. Even the dark and lighting
deprivation were considered, not only as environmental conditioning on the mood (Fusco, 2005a),
but also through the psychological analysis of specific light manipulation techniques, such as
Sendep and Ganzfeld Effect. Finally, some guidelines were shown to improve health and wellness of the individual exposed to the light in a given environment (healthy lighting), getting to define an Ecological approach to light and lighting perception in human life, that would also involve some light-based techniques, such as Light Design and Light Art.
Keywords
Psychology of Light, Light Perception, Light Design, Ligh Art, Lighting Psychology
1. Introduction
From a psychological point of view, talking about the light is like plunging into the depths of the psyche, but also dealing with the limits and possibilities of the perceptive skills, natural equipment of the human psychophysical apparatus, influencing our health and wellness throughout the life.
Light was analyzed not only by a perceptive point of view, but also as a driver of cognitive, emotional and
behavioural responses by the perceiver in different experiential contexts of everyday life. It showed that light is
a Cognitive Map able to guide and direct the individual in the exploration and discovery of the surrounding enHow to cite this paper: Tomassoni, R., Galetta, G., & Treglia, E. (2015). Psychology of Light: How Light Influences the Health
and Psyche. Psychology, 6, 1216-1222. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/psych.2015.610119
R. Tomassoni et al.
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the instinctive and primitive defense mechanisms against the unknown, that may determine fear (instinct to escape) or aggressiveness (instinct to attack): so, light helps to give meaning to the environment and drive the
process of interpretation of reality (but also adaptation to that), performed by a subject in a state of cognitive
uncertainty in order to controlling the external environment. But, at the same time, human being is also attracted
by a sense of mystery and complexity, that arises from the discovery of a new and unknown environment, being
inclined to prefer unconventional solutions, in which light, with its many shades and gradations, leads the individual through the process of exploration towards the unknown: paradoxically, light seems to hide, rather than
reveal the mystery, but just for this it attracts, involves, stimulates and fascinates us so much. While coherence
reassures, complexity fascinates us; but either way, light always drives our visual apparatus through the semantic path of environmental information decoding, whether that comes from a domestic or working environment,
an architectural or urban space, a store corner, a building interior, or an exhibition space of a museum or art gallery: light, and its perception by human, shapes the world (Lam, 1992).
According to the model of mental processing provided by each individual, based in part on his/her own neuro-perceptual structures, partly on the subjective personality and unconscious drives, light stimuli (i.e. sensory
input) will be able to induce specific emotions, behaviours and mood (Fusco, 2005b, 2012; Fusco et al., 2011;
Tomassoni, 2014), as well as influence bodily and mental health, but also the level of aesthetic appreciation by
the perceiver towards a given environment, especially if the same viewer (and not the light designer) controls
the light source, that becomes a source of aesthetic pleasure or environmental enjoyment by the subject. Due to
the capacity of lightwhether natural or artificial, colored or fluorescent, evanescent or materialto induce
specific perceptive alterations within the sensory sphere of the human, the holistic, all-encompassing, and immersive dimension of individual involvement is, therefore, the key to the effectiveness of any lit environment.
Light source, the energy that emanates from it, and the light-generated biopsychic effects, just become the focus
of all perceptual mechanisms and interpretative processes implemented by each perceiver: light has not only the
role to make visible an object for a viewer, but also to contextualize it within the environmental space. For example, the location of an object within the environment, according to the angle of incidence of one or more light
sources, as well as the capacity of the object in absorbing and reflecting the light (luminous radiance or reflectance), are capable of driving human perception and emotions, as well as influencing the bodily and mental
wellness (Collins, 1993).
As already noted by Arnheim (1954), by a perceptual point of view, human eye is not able to distinguish between the reflection power of an object and its real light emanation: eyes receives only the final result by a gestaltic impression, that is the intensity of light perceived within the visual field by the human: this is the reason
why a light-reflecting object seems to emanate a light of its own, as if this was an property inherent the object in
itself. Therefore, what influences the psychophysical viewers apparatus is the overall effect of the environment
exposed to a light source, together with the object positioning within a space context: Light Design takes advantage of that cumulative effect, related to the sum of all the above factors (object + light + environment) to induce
specific emotions, behaviours and psychophysical feedbacks by the perceiver, influencing his/her health and
wellness. The so-called Light Art, for example, uses various types light sources (such as Neon, LED, fluorescent
lighting, and so on), namely objects emanating a specific luminous energy inherent to the same lighting devices,
but such energy (and its chromatic spectrum) is mixed to the items present on the set, appropriately positioned in
the environmental space to be able to absorb and reflect light energy in a precise exhibition strategy, in order to
produce an overall perceptual effect in the perceiver, exciting different emotions and behaviours during the individual experience of aesthetic appreciation. In the case of realistic painting, light perceived within the depicted
scene is not a light energy inherent to the canvas in itself, but an analogical representation of the light handed
back by the artist through an artful use of colours, that are able to simulate light refracted by represented objects
and the surrounding environment, as they reflect the light of the exhibition space (or environment) in which the
artwork is positioned: house, public space, museum, art gallery, shop corner, factory, city and urban space.
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which light scans reading, perception and interpretation times by the perceiver. Moreover, it must consider the
influence of light on the human beings biorhythms: in fact, human life is marked by the alternation of night/day,
dark/light, sleep/wake and work/rest rhythms (or circadian rhythms). According to light intensity, refractive index and wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation emitted by a light source, light determines the colour perception of the objects inside a lit environment, influencing the mood and behaviour of people exposed (Veitch &
Newsham, 1998; Boyce et al., 2000).
The Sendep (i.e. sensory deprivation) or perceptual isolation, especially about light, has negative effects on
the human being from a neuropsychiatric perspective: in fact, it has been widely used in the military field as a
torture method, (such as the brainwashing), on war prisoners, as happened during Korean and Vietnam wars
(Solomon et al., 1961). A related phenomenon is the so-called Ganzfeld Effect (or perceptual deprivation), that
occurs when a constant and uniform light stimulus is used, instead of remove it: this leads to effects similar to
sensory deprivation: for instance, by submitting an individual to a uniform lighting (or flashes of light) for a
long time (Wackermann, Ptz, & Allefeld, 2008). It is no coincidence that the American artist James Turrell, in
the artwork series entitled Ganzfeld, uses the properties of the fluorescent light to reproduce a feeling of estrangement and absence of depth field. The Ganzfelds are defined by Turrell as sensing spaces, namely homogeneous perceptive spaces and visual fields that provide the viewer the disorienting experience of fullness of
emptiness or horizons absence, enhancing the perception of real space and permitting the views of so-called
skyspaces. Through his art research about the control-based use of light, James Turrell (together with his colleague Robert Irwin, and the perception psychologist Edward Wortz) explores the human perception processes
in controlled environments, in a state of alteration of perception, performing experiments about the total perceptual fields (Ganzfeld) and sensory deprivation, as a part of Art and Technology Program, established by the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art (in collaboration with scientists and engineers at Lockheed Aircraft, IBM and
Garrett Aerospace Corporation).
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of artistic expression was born, as just demonstrated with famous artworks by James Turrell, Dan Flavin, and
the artists of the Californian art movement of Light and Space (Butterfield, 1996). The aesthetic perception by
the viewer, led by psychobiological mechanisms specialized in the course of evolution (Martindale, Locher, &
Petrov, 2007), has faced for the first time an artificial vision of the environmental space, thatjust through
the lighthas become modified spatial perception, according to a precise aesthetic strategy planned by light designers (Flynn, 1988; Kaplan et al., 1998). In the Light Art artworks, as well as Light Design in general, light
and lighting take up the function to illuminate the environmental (which is perceptual and experiential space),
highlighting and marking objects, revealing spatial or symbolic paths, focus or divert the viewers attention in
front of a specific artworks detail, letting out the symbolic strategy and meaning trajectories planned by the artist or light designer. In fact, through research performed by using light sources of different spectrum (from natural to artificial light), it was established a significant correlation between lighting levels and light colours, psychophysiological reactions and emotional responses by the perceivers: generally, a higher intensity of light stimulation corresponds to a higher level of concentration/attention, associated with a greater emotional response
by the subject. For example, the exposure to a flashing or pulsating light (rather than a steady light) induces
faster emotional responses by the perceiver: in fact, flashing light is associated with the danger, activating an
innate state of alert in the human, enabling him/her to react quickly and in a most extreme way, influencing
judgment abilities, problem solving and decision making skills. Through the lighting modulation (and its colour
spectrum), it is possible to stimulate different emotions in human being, such as physical attraction or aggressiveness: the activation of specific neurotransmitters and the production, at biochemical level, of specific hormones in the presence of determined colour light source, shows the psychobiological bases of light perception
by human, that may change according to the subjects sex or age (Burg, 1967), but also the supposed effectiveness of some alternative medicine techniques (such as chromotherapy) on the psychological wellbeing of the individual.
Lighting conditions, as well as the intensity and colour of the light source, influence indeed the human biological cycles and, by a chronopsychological point of view, the circadian rhythm, by increasing or decreasing
the level of specific hormonal secretions (such as melatonin, namely the marker-hormone of circadian rhythms,
produced by the pineal gland), that are responsible for certain neurophysiological states. Critical, in this sense,
was the discovery of a specific photoreceptor cell in the human retina, the melanopsin, responsible (during the
phototransduction process) for synchronizing the biological clock in the human: throughthe use of higher or
lower lighting levels, it is possible to inhibit the production of melatonin, inducing a higher concentration; in
fact, melatonin levels increase during the night, when light is low, stimulating the sleep onset (McIntyre et al.,
1989); on the contrary, over-lighting or close light flashes provoke dazzle, that by reducing the perceivers visibility and visual performance, bring out discomfort, stress, sense of danger, and disorientation in the individual,
that if sustained over time may lead to neuropsychiatric disorders: human is a photosensitive being (Bruce &
Green, 1990; Daurat et al., 1993).
6. Conclusion
By using the outcomes of these investigations, Light Design and Light Art might proposefrom the point of
view of human healthan integrated, strategic and healthy use of the light sources, in order to improve the
psychophysiological wellness of the individual (healthy lighting), the holistic-perceptive experience relating to a
specific architectural environment (e.g. the exhibition space in a museum or art gallery, but also the home interior, or the working space in an office), and, moreover, concerning the aesthetic appreciation of a space, object
or artwork and their affordance: since the photobiological lighting effects are related to the characteristics of
light energy incident on human retina, a different modulation of the light stimulus and its chromatic range has
not only the role of making pleasant, comfortable or simply significant a given environment for a perceiver, but
also improving the health and wellness of the individual, according to a specific ecological approach to visual
perception (Gibson, 1979).
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