The perceptual image quality of natural scenes as a function of the physical system parameter gamma has a definite optimum. This optimum is subject-independent and greater than 1, but was found to vary from one scene to another. If gamma is varied, brightness contrast is the most obviously changing perceptual attribute. Subjects appear to be able to make consistent, global judgments of brightness contrast in natural scenes, despite the fact that local brightness contrast may vary considerably. If scaled perceptual quality is plotted against scaled (perceived) brightness contrast, all curves coincide, suggesting that under the given conditions brightness contrast is the dominant psychological dimension of the perceptual image quality. Taking...