We tested whether surface specularity alone supports operational color constancy—the ability to discriminate changes in illumination or reflectance. Observers viewed short animations of illuminant or reflectance changes in rendered scenes containing a single spherical surface and were asked to classify the change. Performance improved with increasing specularity, as predicted from regularities in chromatic statistics. Peak performance was impaired by spatial rearrangements of image pixels that disrupted the perception of illuminated surfaces but was maintained with increased surface complexity. The characteristic chromatic transformations that are available with nonzero specularity are useful for operational color constancy, particularly if...
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in i...
To identify surface properties independently of the illumination the visual system must make assumpt...
Colour constancy is generally assumed to arise from a combination of perceptual constancy mechanisms...
We tested whether surface specularity alone supports operational color constancy—the ability to disc...
Color constancy is the ability to recover a stable perceptual estimate of surface reflectance, regar...
Colour constancy is traditionally interpreted as the stable appearance of the colour of a surface de...
The surface properties of an object, such as texture, glossiness or colour, provide important cues t...
There is a growing trend in machine color constancy research to use only image chromaticity informat...
Objects hardly appear to change color when the spectral distribution of the illumination changes: a ...
AbstractMany recent computational models of surface color perception presuppose information about il...
Colour constancy refers to our visual ability to identify the colour of objects under different illu...
The light reflected from a surface depends on the reflectance of that surface and the spectral power...
Colour sensation does not depend strictly on the light signal conveying colour information, but also...
Color constancy involves correctly attributing a bias in the color of the light reaching your eyes t...
Previous studies on color constancy have found that the color appearance of a test surface varies bo...
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in i...
To identify surface properties independently of the illumination the visual system must make assumpt...
Colour constancy is generally assumed to arise from a combination of perceptual constancy mechanisms...
We tested whether surface specularity alone supports operational color constancy—the ability to disc...
Color constancy is the ability to recover a stable perceptual estimate of surface reflectance, regar...
Colour constancy is traditionally interpreted as the stable appearance of the colour of a surface de...
The surface properties of an object, such as texture, glossiness or colour, provide important cues t...
There is a growing trend in machine color constancy research to use only image chromaticity informat...
Objects hardly appear to change color when the spectral distribution of the illumination changes: a ...
AbstractMany recent computational models of surface color perception presuppose information about il...
Colour constancy refers to our visual ability to identify the colour of objects under different illu...
The light reflected from a surface depends on the reflectance of that surface and the spectral power...
Colour sensation does not depend strictly on the light signal conveying colour information, but also...
Color constancy involves correctly attributing a bias in the color of the light reaching your eyes t...
Previous studies on color constancy have found that the color appearance of a test surface varies bo...
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in i...
To identify surface properties independently of the illumination the visual system must make assumpt...
Colour constancy is generally assumed to arise from a combination of perceptual constancy mechanisms...