Ripamonti Caterina, Bloj Marina, Hauck Robin, Kiran Mitha, Greenwald Scott, Maloney Shannon I, Brainard David H
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
J Vis. 2004 Sep 8;4(9):747-63. doi: 10.1167/4.9.7.
When a planar object is rotated with respect to a directional light source, the reflected luminance changes. If surface lightness is to be a reliable guide to surface identity, observers must compensate for such changes. To the extent they do, observers are said to be lightness constant. We report data from a lightness matching task that assesses lightness constancy with respect to changes in object slant. On each trial, observers viewed an achromatic standard object and indicated the best match from a palette of 36 grayscale samples. The standard object and the palette were visible simultaneously within an experimental chamber. The chamber illumination was provided from above by a theater stage lamp. The standard objects were uniformly-painted flat cards. Different groups of naive observers made matches under two sets of instructions. In the Neutral Instructions, observers were asked to match the appearance of the standard and palette sample. In the Paint Instructions, observers were asked to choose the palette sample that was painted the same as the standard. Several broad conclusions may be drawn from the results. First, data for most observers were neither luminance matches nor lightness constant matches. Second, there were large and reliable individual differences. To characterize these, a constancy index was obtained for each observer by comparing how well the data were accounted for by both luminance matching and lightness constancy. The index could take on values between 0 (luminance matching) and 1 (lightness constancy). Individual observer indices ranged between 0.17 and 0.63 with mean 0.40 and median 0.40. An auxiliary slant-matching experiment rules out variation in perceived slant as the source of the individual variability. Third, the effect of instructions was small compared to the inter-observer variability. Implications of the data for models of lightness perception are discussed.
当一个平面物体相对于一个定向光源旋转时,反射亮度会发生变化。如果表面明度要成为表面识别的可靠指标,观察者必须补偿这种变化。就观察者做到这一点的程度而言,他们被认为具有明度恒常性。我们报告了一项明度匹配任务的数据,该任务评估了相对于物体倾斜变化的明度恒常性。在每次试验中,观察者观看一个消色差标准物体,并从36个灰度样本的调色板中指出最佳匹配。标准物体和调色板在实验室内同时可见。室内照明由一盏舞台灯从上方提供。标准物体是均匀涂漆的平卡。不同组的天真观察者在两组指令下进行匹配。在中性指令中,要求观察者匹配标准物体和调色板样本的外观。在涂漆指令中,要求观察者选择与标准物体涂漆相同的调色板样本。从结果中可以得出几个广泛的结论。首先,大多数观察者的数据既不是亮度匹配也不是明度恒常匹配。其次,存在大且可靠的个体差异。为了描述这些差异,通过比较亮度匹配和明度恒常性对数据的解释程度,为每个观察者获得了一个恒常性指数。该指数的值可以在0(亮度匹配)到1(明度恒常性)之间。个体观察者的指数范围在0.17到0.63之间,平均值为0.40,中位数为0.40。一项辅助的倾斜匹配实验排除了感知倾斜的变化作为个体变异性的来源。第三,与观察者间的变异性相比,指令的影响较小。讨论了这些数据对明度感知模型的影响。