AbstractThe White effect [Perception 8 (1979) 413] cannot be simply explained as due to either brightness contrast or brightness assimilation because the direction of the induced brightness change does not correlate with the amount of black or white border in contact with the gray test patch. This has led some investigators to abandon spatial filtering explanations not only for the White effect but for brightness perception in general. Offered instead are explanations based on a variety of junction analyses and/or perceptual organization schemes which in the case of the White effect are usually based on T-junctions. Recently, Howe [Perception 30 (2001) 1023] challenged T-junction based explanations with a novel variation of White’s effect i...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Bright contexts surrounding achromatic stimuli gene...
AbstractWe masked White’s and Benary’s brightness illusions and simultaneous contrast with narrowban...
The variation between the actual and perceived lightness of a stimulus has strong dependency on its ...
AbstractThe White effect [Perception 8 (1979) 413] cannot be simply explained as due to either brigh...
AbstractBrightness induction includes both contrast and assimilations effects. Brightness contrast o...
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...
AbstractBlakeslee and McCourt [Blakeslee, B., & McCourt, M.E. (1997). Similar mechanisms underlie si...
AbstractIt has been proposed that both White's effect and the grating induction effect are examples ...
AbstractBrightness (perceived intensity) and lightness (perceived reflectance) matching were investi...
AbstractTheories of induction propose that the brightness of a test patch within a complex surround ...
AbstractBrightness induction refers to a class of visual illusions where the perceived intensity of ...
AbstractThe experiments explore whether the mechanism(s) underlying grating induction (GI) can also ...
AbstractThis study investigates the role played by individual spatial scales in determining the appa...
AbstractIn simultaneous brightness contrast displays, a gray target square GB bordered by black appe...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Bright contexts surrounding achromatic stimuli gene...
AbstractWe masked White’s and Benary’s brightness illusions and simultaneous contrast with narrowban...
The variation between the actual and perceived lightness of a stimulus has strong dependency on its ...
AbstractThe White effect [Perception 8 (1979) 413] cannot be simply explained as due to either brigh...
AbstractBrightness induction includes both contrast and assimilations effects. Brightness contrast o...
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...
AbstractBlakeslee and McCourt [Blakeslee, B., & McCourt, M.E. (1997). Similar mechanisms underlie si...
AbstractIt has been proposed that both White's effect and the grating induction effect are examples ...
AbstractBrightness (perceived intensity) and lightness (perceived reflectance) matching were investi...
AbstractTheories of induction propose that the brightness of a test patch within a complex surround ...
AbstractBrightness induction refers to a class of visual illusions where the perceived intensity of ...
AbstractThe experiments explore whether the mechanism(s) underlying grating induction (GI) can also ...
AbstractThis study investigates the role played by individual spatial scales in determining the appa...
AbstractIn simultaneous brightness contrast displays, a gray target square GB bordered by black appe...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-08Bright contexts surrounding achromatic stimuli gene...
AbstractWe masked White’s and Benary’s brightness illusions and simultaneous contrast with narrowban...
The variation between the actual and perceived lightness of a stimulus has strong dependency on its ...