Lotto R B, Purves D
Duke University Medical Center, Box 3209, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2000 Nov 7;97(23):12834-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.210369597.
For reasons not well understood, the color of a surface can appear quite different when placed in different chromatic surrounds. Here we explore the possibility that these color contrast effects are generated according to what the same or similar stimuli have turned out to signify in the past about the physical relationships between reflectance, illumination, and the spectral returns they produce. This hypothesis was evaluated by (i) comparing the physical relationships of reflectances, illuminants, and spectral returns with the perceptual phenomenology of color contrast and (ii) testing whether perceptions of color contrast are predictably changed by altering the probabilities of the possible sources of the stimulus. The results we describe are consistent with a wholly empirical explanation of color contrast effects.
出于一些尚未完全理解的原因,当置于不同的色彩环境中时,一个表面的颜色可能会显得截然不同。在此,我们探讨了这样一种可能性,即这些颜色对比效果是根据相同或相似的刺激过去所表明的关于反射率、光照以及它们所产生的光谱回报之间的物理关系而产生的。通过以下方式对这一假设进行了评估:(i)将反射率、光源和光谱回报的物理关系与颜色对比的感知现象学进行比较;(ii)测试改变刺激可能来源的概率是否会可预测地改变颜色对比的感知。我们所描述的结果与对颜色对比效果的完全基于经验的解释相一致。