AbstractThe brightness that results from stimulating a particular test-region of the retina may be depressed or enhanced by simultaneous stimulation of other “inducing”-regions. The test-region brightness may be affected by contiguous inducing-regions (local contrast effects), and by non-contiguous inducing regions (long-range effects sometimes called “assimilation”). We describe a computational model for early vision that can predict the results of brightness-matching procedures commonly used to measure these phenomena. According to this model, brightness depression reflects primarily lateral inhibition that underlies local contrast effects; whereas brightness enhancement results from processes similar, in spirit, to those described in Hel...
Retinal lateral inhibition is one of the conventional efficient coding mechanisms in the visual syst...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
AbstractThe White effect [Perception 8 (1979) 413] cannot be simply explained as due to either brigh...
AbstractThe brightness that results from stimulating a particular test-region of the retina may be d...
AbstractBrightness induction includes both contrast and assimilations effects. Brightness contrast o...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
A physically identical shade of gray on a black background appears lighter than on a white backgroun...
AbstractThe experiments explore whether the mechanism(s) underlying grating induction (GI) can also ...
AbstractTheories of induction propose that the brightness of a test patch within a complex surround ...
In the phenomenon of simultaneous brightness contrast, two patches, one on a dark background and the...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
AbstractWe have applied a multiple scale, 2-D model of brightness perception to a broad range of bri...
AbstractBlakeslee and McCourt ((1997) Vision Research, 37, 2849–2869) demonstrated that a multiscale...
AbstractWe introduce two new low-level computational models of brightness perception that account fo...
AbstractThe appearance of a patch of color or its contrast depends not only on the stimulus itself b...
Retinal lateral inhibition is one of the conventional efficient coding mechanisms in the visual syst...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
AbstractThe White effect [Perception 8 (1979) 413] cannot be simply explained as due to either brigh...
AbstractThe brightness that results from stimulating a particular test-region of the retina may be d...
AbstractBrightness induction includes both contrast and assimilations effects. Brightness contrast o...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
A physically identical shade of gray on a black background appears lighter than on a white backgroun...
AbstractThe experiments explore whether the mechanism(s) underlying grating induction (GI) can also ...
AbstractTheories of induction propose that the brightness of a test patch within a complex surround ...
In the phenomenon of simultaneous brightness contrast, two patches, one on a dark background and the...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
AbstractWe have applied a multiple scale, 2-D model of brightness perception to a broad range of bri...
AbstractBlakeslee and McCourt ((1997) Vision Research, 37, 2849–2869) demonstrated that a multiscale...
AbstractWe introduce two new low-level computational models of brightness perception that account fo...
AbstractThe appearance of a patch of color or its contrast depends not only on the stimulus itself b...
Retinal lateral inhibition is one of the conventional efficient coding mechanisms in the visual syst...
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of sur...
AbstractThe White effect [Perception 8 (1979) 413] cannot be simply explained as due to either brigh...