Disparity, motion, and color information improve gloss constancy performance

被引:74
作者
Wendt, Gunnar [1 ]
Faul, Franz [1 ]
Ekroll, Vebjorn [1 ]
Mausfeld, Rainer [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Psychol, Kiel, Germany
来源
JOURNAL OF VISION | 2010年 / 10卷 / 09期
关键词
gloss constancy; gloss perception; specular highlights; SURFACE-REFLECTANCE; VISUAL-PERCEPTION; SHAPE; ILLUMINATION; HIGHLIGHTS; CUES;
D O I
10.1167/10.9.7
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
S. Nishida and M. Shinya (1998) found that observers have only a limited ability to recover surface-reflectance properties under changes in surface shape. Our aim in the present study was to investigate how the degree of surface-reflectance constancy depends on the availability of information that may help to infer the reflectance and shape properties of surfaces. To this end, we manipulated the availability of (i) motion-induced information (static vs. dynamic presentation), (ii) disparity information (with the levels "monocular," "surface disparity," and "surface + highlight disparity"), and (iii) color information (grayscale stimuli vs. hue differences between diffuse and specular reflections). The task of the subjects was to match the perceived lightness and glossiness between two surfaces with different spatial frequency and amplitude by manipulating the diffuse component and the exponent of the Phong lighting model in one of the surfaces. Our results indicate that all three types of information improve the constancy of glossiness matches-both in isolation and in combination. The lightness matching data only revealed an influence of motion and color information. Our results indicate, somewhat counterintuitively, that motion information has a detrimental effect on lightness constancy.
引用
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页数:17
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