People keep saying that an EV 0 is 1 sec at f/1.0 at ASA 100. It isn't. It's just 1 sec at f/1.0. An EV is not a measurement of light.
http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Light_and_Exposure_Values_(LV_&_EV)
But an EV without regard to sensitivity is an utterly useless concept for anyone attempting to
make use of an exposure, and it directly becomes a measurement of light once you add that context. [Literally how every single light meter I own provides me a reading...]
I really can't understand the desire to maintain a notation that deliberately drops the context needed to actually utilize it, just to shoe horn on additional elements to the notation to then make it functionally identical, when EV[ISO] works so wonderfully well.
EV[100] 0 = 1 sec at f/1.0
Switch to [50] - You're now a stop lower, so in the same scene you would drop down and use EV[50] -1 = 2 sec at f/1.0 to equal the same relative exposure.
Using film at ISO 100 and add a 1 stop filter? Assuming you're not metering through the filter, then you compensate by measuring as EV[50], or take one off your EV[100].
EV/Sensitivity | Shutter Speed | Aperture - Three coupled values that work beautifully in lockstep by similar stop value. Move one value up or down, to lighten or darken, but adjust the other two by the same combined amount to keep the same overall effective light. It is a really beautiful and simple system, and it seems a shame to waste time with bothering to be 'more technically correct' for no great benefit.
Photographers have been improving and streamlining systems and scales since the beginning. I can't really see any good reason to stop this tradition at distinct LV and contextless EV.
Sure, it might be handy to be aware of, but I've gotten more mileage out of knowing about roman miles than I have the LV scale.