Previous studies suggest that to achieve color constancy, the human visual system makes use of multiple cues, including a priori assumptions about the illumination (“daylight priors”). Specular highlights have been proposed to aid constancy, but the evidence for their usefulness is mixed. Here, we used a novel cue-combination approach to test whether the presence of specular highlights or the validity of a daylight prior improves illumination chromaticity estimates, inferred from achromatic settings, to determine whether and under which conditions either cue contributes to color constancy. Observers made achromatic settings within three-dimensional rendered scenes containing matte or glossy shapes, illuminated by either daylight or nondayli...
When we look at an object, we simultaneously see how glossy or matte it is, how light or dark, and w...
Colour constancy refers to our visual ability to identify the colour of objects under different illu...
We measured discrimination thresholds for illumination changes along different chromatic directions ...
Previous studies suggest that to achieve color constancy, the human visual system makes use of multi...
Colour is crucial for detecting, recognising, and interacting with objects. However, the reflected w...
AbstractMany recent computational models of surface color perception presuppose information about il...
We tested whether surface specularity alone supports operational color constancy—the ability to disc...
Color constancy involves correctly attributing a bias in the color of the light reaching your eyes t...
PhD ThesisThe light reflected from object surfaces changes with the spectral content of the illumina...
AbstractTo test whether temporal transient cues could improve colour-constancy estimates, surface-co...
Objects hardly appear to change color when the spectral distribution of the illumination changes: a ...
The phenomenon of colour constancy in human visual perception keeps surface colours constant, despit...
We studied color constancy using a pair of identical 3-D Color Mondrian displays. We viewed one 3-D ...
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in i...
The human visual system is capable of maintaining constant object colors despite changes in the surr...
When we look at an object, we simultaneously see how glossy or matte it is, how light or dark, and w...
Colour constancy refers to our visual ability to identify the colour of objects under different illu...
We measured discrimination thresholds for illumination changes along different chromatic directions ...
Previous studies suggest that to achieve color constancy, the human visual system makes use of multi...
Colour is crucial for detecting, recognising, and interacting with objects. However, the reflected w...
AbstractMany recent computational models of surface color perception presuppose information about il...
We tested whether surface specularity alone supports operational color constancy—the ability to disc...
Color constancy involves correctly attributing a bias in the color of the light reaching your eyes t...
PhD ThesisThe light reflected from object surfaces changes with the spectral content of the illumina...
AbstractTo test whether temporal transient cues could improve colour-constancy estimates, surface-co...
Objects hardly appear to change color when the spectral distribution of the illumination changes: a ...
The phenomenon of colour constancy in human visual perception keeps surface colours constant, despit...
We studied color constancy using a pair of identical 3-D Color Mondrian displays. We viewed one 3-D ...
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in i...
The human visual system is capable of maintaining constant object colors despite changes in the surr...
When we look at an object, we simultaneously see how glossy or matte it is, how light or dark, and w...
Colour constancy refers to our visual ability to identify the colour of objects under different illu...
We measured discrimination thresholds for illumination changes along different chromatic directions ...