Categorical color constancy for real surfaces
Categorical color constancy for real surfaces
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in illumination. This constancy is helpful for identifying objects across viewing conditions. Studies on color constancy often employ monitor simulations of illumination and reflectance changes. Real scenes, however, have features that might be important for color constancy but that are in general not captured by monitor displays. Here, we investigate categorical color constancy employing real surfaces and real illuminants in a rich viewing context. Observers sorted 450 Munsell samples into the 11 basic color categories under a daylight and four filtered daylight illuminants. We additionally manipulated illuminant cues from the local surround. Color constancy as quantified both with a classification consistency index and a standard color constancy index was high in both cue conditions. Observers generally classified colors with the same precision across different illuminants as across repetitions for the daylight illuminant. Moreover, the pattern of classification consistency in terms of stimulus hue, value, and chroma was similar when comparing different observers for the daylight illuminant and when comparing individual observers across different illuminants. We conclude that color categorization is robust under illuminant changes as well as across observers, thus potentially serving both object identification and communication.
1-11
Olkkonen, Maria
dfb2aa1f-6df4-4117-b8be-27829c079045
Witzel, Christoph
dfb994f1-7007-441a-9e1a-ddb167f44166
Hansen, Thorsten
5ac7c5e3-a7c1-4a9a-bdc9-bab45a2634a7
Gegenfurtner, Karl R.
4a15dafb-60db-41c6-a845-b0f37bee8d3e
16 December 2010
Olkkonen, Maria
dfb2aa1f-6df4-4117-b8be-27829c079045
Witzel, Christoph
dfb994f1-7007-441a-9e1a-ddb167f44166
Hansen, Thorsten
5ac7c5e3-a7c1-4a9a-bdc9-bab45a2634a7
Gegenfurtner, Karl R.
4a15dafb-60db-41c6-a845-b0f37bee8d3e
Olkkonen, Maria, Witzel, Christoph, Hansen, Thorsten and Gegenfurtner, Karl R.
(2010)
Categorical color constancy for real surfaces.
Journal of Vision, 10 (9), , [16].
(doi:10.1167/10.9.16).
Abstract
In everyday experience, perceived colors of objects remain approximately constant under changes in illumination. This constancy is helpful for identifying objects across viewing conditions. Studies on color constancy often employ monitor simulations of illumination and reflectance changes. Real scenes, however, have features that might be important for color constancy but that are in general not captured by monitor displays. Here, we investigate categorical color constancy employing real surfaces and real illuminants in a rich viewing context. Observers sorted 450 Munsell samples into the 11 basic color categories under a daylight and four filtered daylight illuminants. We additionally manipulated illuminant cues from the local surround. Color constancy as quantified both with a classification consistency index and a standard color constancy index was high in both cue conditions. Observers generally classified colors with the same precision across different illuminants as across repetitions for the daylight illuminant. Moreover, the pattern of classification consistency in terms of stimulus hue, value, and chroma was similar when comparing different observers for the daylight illuminant and when comparing individual observers across different illuminants. We conclude that color categorization is robust under illuminant changes as well as across observers, thus potentially serving both object identification and communication.
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Published date: 16 December 2010
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Local EPrints ID: 438608
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/438608
ISSN: 1534-7362
PURE UUID: 2f700d14-75fd-4bb5-b336-00e22f54e20f
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Date deposited: 18 Mar 2020 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00
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Author:
Maria Olkkonen
Author:
Thorsten Hansen
Author:
Karl R. Gegenfurtner
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