Lightness (the perceived dimension running from black to white) represents a problem for vision science because the light coming to the eye from an object totally fails to specify the shade of gray of the object, due to the confounding of surface gray and illumination intensity. The two leading approaches, decomposition theories and anchoring theories, split the retinal image into overlapping layers and adjacent frameworks, respectively. Because each approach has important strengths and some weaknesses, an integration of them would mark an important step forward for the lightness theory. But the problem remains how this integration can actually be realized
SummaryHow the visual system detects surface reflectance — lightness — has puzzled researchers for c...
The lightness of a visual surface is its perceived achromatic reflectance [Adelson, E. H., (2000). L...
AbstractThe past quarter century has witnessed considerable advances in our understanding of Lightne...
Surface reflectance and illumination level, which are confounded in the retinal image, must be dise...
AbstractThe anchoring theory of lightness perception (Gilchrist et al., Psychological Review 106 (19...
Seeing black, white and gray surfaces, called lightness perception, might seem simple because white ...
The Simultaneous Lightness Contrast is the condition whereby a grey patch on a dark background appe...
Lightness constancy is the ability to perceive black and white surface colors under a wide range of ...
The specific gray shades in a visual scene can be derived from relative luminance values only when a...
This article develops a neural model of how the visual system processes natural images under variabl...
The Simultaneous Lightness Contrast is the condition whereby a grey patch on a dark background appea...
AbstractThe lightness of a visual surface is its perceived achromatic reflectance [Adelson, E. H., (...
This volume deals with the visual perception of lightness, brightness, and transparency of surfaces,...
AbstractRecent experiments suggest that our perception of lightness involves a sophisticated interpr...
The specific gray shades in a visual scene can be derived from relative luminance values only when a...
SummaryHow the visual system detects surface reflectance — lightness — has puzzled researchers for c...
The lightness of a visual surface is its perceived achromatic reflectance [Adelson, E. H., (2000). L...
AbstractThe past quarter century has witnessed considerable advances in our understanding of Lightne...
Surface reflectance and illumination level, which are confounded in the retinal image, must be dise...
AbstractThe anchoring theory of lightness perception (Gilchrist et al., Psychological Review 106 (19...
Seeing black, white and gray surfaces, called lightness perception, might seem simple because white ...
The Simultaneous Lightness Contrast is the condition whereby a grey patch on a dark background appe...
Lightness constancy is the ability to perceive black and white surface colors under a wide range of ...
The specific gray shades in a visual scene can be derived from relative luminance values only when a...
This article develops a neural model of how the visual system processes natural images under variabl...
The Simultaneous Lightness Contrast is the condition whereby a grey patch on a dark background appea...
AbstractThe lightness of a visual surface is its perceived achromatic reflectance [Adelson, E. H., (...
This volume deals with the visual perception of lightness, brightness, and transparency of surfaces,...
AbstractRecent experiments suggest that our perception of lightness involves a sophisticated interpr...
The specific gray shades in a visual scene can be derived from relative luminance values only when a...
SummaryHow the visual system detects surface reflectance — lightness — has puzzled researchers for c...
The lightness of a visual surface is its perceived achromatic reflectance [Adelson, E. H., (2000). L...
AbstractThe past quarter century has witnessed considerable advances in our understanding of Lightne...