Ecological Approach to Cinematographic Lighting of the Human Face – A Pilot Study

Sampsa Huttunen
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Abstract

Abstract One key aspect of cinematographic lighting – and lighting in general – is its direction and how the lighting illuminates people and other objects of attention. In a natural setting, the light reaching the target usually has at least some level of directionality instead of being just ambient overall light. In cinematography directionality is used, among other things, to enhance the lit object’s three-dimensionality in an otherwise two-dimensional medium by bringing out its shape and texture and separating it from the background. While lighting has typically been studied based on its physical qualities that render for quantitative measures, such as intensity or color spectrum, less is known about how cinematographic lighting gives rise to the spectator’s emotive-cognitive experiences. Overall, film lighting has been studied surprisingly little, although both practical and academic literature emphasize its important role in cinematic expression. This paper presents a pilot study that examines viewers’ emotional reactions to photographs of an expressionless human face under lighting from different directions. The initial results indicate that lighting that obscures, hides, or distorts facial features creates stronger emotional reactions in the viewer than lighting that reveals them, contributing to the scientific understanding of the audience’s reactions and the filmmaker’s creative decisions.
生态学方法对电影照明的人脸-一个试点研究
电影照明和一般照明的一个关键方面是它的方向以及灯光如何照亮人们和其他注意对象。在自然环境中,到达目标的光通常至少有一定程度的方向性,而不仅仅是环境的整体光。在电影摄影中,方向性除了其他用途外,还可以通过突出物体的形状和纹理,并将其从背景中分离出来,从而增强物体在二维介质中的三维立体感。虽然照明通常是基于其物理品质进行定量测量的研究,如强度或色彩光谱,但对于电影照明如何引起观众的情感认知体验,人们知之甚少。总体而言,电影灯光的研究令人惊讶地少,尽管实践和学术文献都强调它在电影表达中的重要作用。本文提出了一项初步研究,研究观众在不同方向的光线下对无表情人脸照片的情绪反应。最初的结果表明,模糊、隐藏或扭曲面部特征的灯光比揭示面部特征的灯光在观众中产生更强烈的情感反应,有助于科学地理解观众的反应和电影制作人的创作决定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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