The perceived colors of reflecting surfaces generally remain stable despite changes in the spectrum of the illuminating light. This color constancy can be measured operationally by asking observers to distinguish illuminant changes on a scene from changes in the reflecting properties of the surfaces comprising it. It is shown here that during fast illuminant changes, simultaneous changes in spectral reflectance of one or more surfaces in an array of other surfaces can be readily detected almost independent of the numbers of surfaces, suggesting a preattentive, spatially parallel process. This process, which is perfect over a spatial window delimited by the anatomical fovea, may form an early input to a multistage analysis of surface color, ...
Colour sensation does not depend strictly on the light signal conveying colour information, but also...
The colours of surfaces in a scene may not appear constant with a change in the colour of the illumi...
Colour constancy is generally assumed to arise from a combination of perceptual constancy mechanisms...
Colour constancy is traditionally interpreted as the stable appearance of the colour of a surface de...
In two experiments simultaneous color constancy was measured using simulations of illuminated surfac...
AbstractIn two experiments simultaneous color constancy was measured using simulations of illuminate...
Objects retain their color in spite of changes in the wavelength and energy composition of the light...
The light reflected from a surface depends on the reflectance of that surface and the spectral power...
A well known property of human vision, known as color constancy , is the ability to correct for colo...
The light reflected from a surface depends on the reflectance of that surface and the spectral power...
A central problem in color vision is that the light reaching the eye from a given surface can vary d...
A central problem in color vision is that the light reaching the eye from a given surface can vary d...
Color constancy is the ability to recover a stable perceptual estimate of surface reflectance, regar...
A fundamental problem in psycophysical experiments is that significant conclusions are hard to draw ...
Color is the brain’s estimate of reflectance for a given surface. Reflectance describes how much lig...
Colour sensation does not depend strictly on the light signal conveying colour information, but also...
The colours of surfaces in a scene may not appear constant with a change in the colour of the illumi...
Colour constancy is generally assumed to arise from a combination of perceptual constancy mechanisms...
Colour constancy is traditionally interpreted as the stable appearance of the colour of a surface de...
In two experiments simultaneous color constancy was measured using simulations of illuminated surfac...
AbstractIn two experiments simultaneous color constancy was measured using simulations of illuminate...
Objects retain their color in spite of changes in the wavelength and energy composition of the light...
The light reflected from a surface depends on the reflectance of that surface and the spectral power...
A well known property of human vision, known as color constancy , is the ability to correct for colo...
The light reflected from a surface depends on the reflectance of that surface and the spectral power...
A central problem in color vision is that the light reaching the eye from a given surface can vary d...
A central problem in color vision is that the light reaching the eye from a given surface can vary d...
Color constancy is the ability to recover a stable perceptual estimate of surface reflectance, regar...
A fundamental problem in psycophysical experiments is that significant conclusions are hard to draw ...
Color is the brain’s estimate of reflectance for a given surface. Reflectance describes how much lig...
Colour sensation does not depend strictly on the light signal conveying colour information, but also...
The colours of surfaces in a scene may not appear constant with a change in the colour of the illumi...
Colour constancy is generally assumed to arise from a combination of perceptual constancy mechanisms...