Here in Italy a well-known b&w teacher states that incidental reading leads to systematic underexposure and that the greater the contrast in the scene, the greater the level of underexposure. I honestly have not yet understood the reasons for this and use incidental reading when I can.
Both reflected and incident meters assume an average scene luminance range. With shorter than average luminance ranges, the shadows don't reach as far down on the curve and with longer than average, they can fall below the minimum useful gradient level for a quality reproduction. With a reflected exposure meter, it's possible to determine the range between the meter's exposure point and the shadow. It takes more effort with an incident meter, especially if only a single reading is taken. Black and white film's quality is greatly determined by shadow reproduction. While film speed is determined by the shadow region, exposure meters also accommodate other film types like reversal which is more concerned with holding the highlights and reproducing the mid-tones. The relationship of the metered exposure point to the shadows in a black and white exposure is generally assumed.
From D. Connelly's
Calibration Levels of Films and Exposure Devices, The Journal of Photographic Science, Vol. 16, 1968.
"The essential characteristic of a photograph is that it portrays a differing pattern of luminance comprising the object being photographed, but equation 3 which it is intended to use in assessing the exposure required for this range of luminance uses a single value of luminance L
g. The validity of the exposure determination method must, therefore, depend upon the acceptability of the resulting photographs which are produced by
substituting a single value of luminance in the determination of exposure to represent the mulitplicity of values of luminance of the scene itself.
In practice exposure determination by this substitution is satisfactory only for what may be termed average scenes. Unusual distributions of luminance require special exposure assessment. (Emphasis mine)
From the point of view of the film, satisfactory photography depends upon the proper location on its exposure density characteristic of the densities produced by the image illumination within the camera. The greatest and least significant luminances in the scene are required to cause exposure of the film within the usable part of its exposure density characteristic. This implies that the important characteristics of the luminance are:
(i) the ratio of its maximum to its minimum value.
(ii) its absolute value (of maximum or minimum)
The former determines whether or not the film can reproduce the contrast range of the scene and the latter determines the exposure time necessary to provide an exposure which will locate the brightness scale of the scene correctly relative to the film characteristic."
So for the B&W instructor, the old adage applies, "you need to be smarter than the meter."
Equation 3