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The dress and individual differences in the perception of surface properties

The dress and individual differences in the perception of surface properties
The dress and individual differences in the perception of surface properties
This study investigates systematic individual differences in the way observers perceive different kinds of surface properties and their relationship to the dress, which shows striking individual differences in colour perception. We tested whether these individual differences have a common source, namely differences in perceptual strategies according to which observers attribute features in two-dimensional images to surfaces or to their illumination. First, we reanalysed data from two previous experiments on the dress and colour constancy. The comparison of the two experiments revealed that the colour perception of the dress is strongly related to individual differences in colour constancy. Second, two online surveys measured individual differences in the perception of colour-ambiguous images including the dress, in colour constancy, in gloss perception, in the subjective grey-point, in colour naming, and in the perception of an image with ambiguous shading. The results of the surveys replicated and extended previous findings according to which individual differences in the colour perception of the dress are due to implicit assumptions about the illumination. However, results also showed that the individual differences for other phenomena were independent of the dress and of each other. Overall, these results suggest that the striking individual differences in dress colour perception are due to individual differences in the interpretation of illumination cues to achieve colour constancy. At the same time, they undermine the idea of an overall perceptual strategy that encompasses other phenomena more generally related to the interpretation of illumination and surface properties.
0042-6989
76-94
Witzel, Christoph
dfb994f1-7007-441a-9e1a-ddb167f44166
O’Regan, J. Kevin
586f064b-e9b6-4c0b-9054-3e9ec486cf4b
Hansmann-Roth, Sabrina
701f0f8c-301a-4867-b09d-1644bd5fa851
Witzel, Christoph
dfb994f1-7007-441a-9e1a-ddb167f44166
O’Regan, J. Kevin
586f064b-e9b6-4c0b-9054-3e9ec486cf4b
Hansmann-Roth, Sabrina
701f0f8c-301a-4867-b09d-1644bd5fa851

Witzel, Christoph, O’Regan, J. Kevin and Hansmann-Roth, Sabrina (2017) The dress and individual differences in the perception of surface properties. Vision Research, 141, 76-94.

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study investigates systematic individual differences in the way observers perceive different kinds of surface properties and their relationship to the dress, which shows striking individual differences in colour perception. We tested whether these individual differences have a common source, namely differences in perceptual strategies according to which observers attribute features in two-dimensional images to surfaces or to their illumination. First, we reanalysed data from two previous experiments on the dress and colour constancy. The comparison of the two experiments revealed that the colour perception of the dress is strongly related to individual differences in colour constancy. Second, two online surveys measured individual differences in the perception of colour-ambiguous images including the dress, in colour constancy, in gloss perception, in the subjective grey-point, in colour naming, and in the perception of an image with ambiguous shading. The results of the surveys replicated and extended previous findings according to which individual differences in the colour perception of the dress are due to implicit assumptions about the illumination. However, results also showed that the individual differences for other phenomena were independent of the dress and of each other. Overall, these results suggest that the striking individual differences in dress colour perception are due to individual differences in the interpretation of illumination cues to achieve colour constancy. At the same time, they undermine the idea of an overall perceptual strategy that encompasses other phenomena more generally related to the interpretation of illumination and surface properties.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 5 July 2017
Published date: 1 September 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 438907
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/438907
ISSN: 0042-6989
PURE UUID: 28ec9281-f382-489c-93f5-4f7b7e37d547
ORCID for Christoph Witzel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9944-2420

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Date deposited: 26 Mar 2020 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: J. Kevin O’Regan
Author: Sabrina Hansmann-Roth

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