Logvinenko Alexander D, Tokunaga Rumi
Department of Vision Sciences, Glasgow Caledonian University, City Campus, Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, UK.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2011 Aug;73(6):1886-902. doi: 10.3758/s13414-011-0154-2.
Contrary to the implication of the term "lightness constancy", asymmetric lightness matching has never been found to be perfect unless the scene is highly articulated (i.e., contains a number of different reflectances). Also, lightness constancy has been found to vary for different observers, and an effect of instruction (lightness vs. brightness) has been reported. The elusiveness of lightness constancy presents a great challenge to visual science; we revisit these issues in the following experiment, which involved 44 observers in total. The stimuli consisted of a large sheet of black paper with a rectangular spotlight projected onto the lower half and 40 squares of various shades of grey printed on the upper half. The luminance ratio at the edge of the spotlight was 25, while that of the squares varied from 2 to 16. Three different instructions were given to observers: They were asked to find a square in the upper half that (i) looked as if it was made of the same paper as that on which the spotlight fell (lightness match), (ii) had the same luminance contrast as the spotlight edge (contrast match), or (iii) had the same brightness as the spotlight (brightness match). Observers made 10 matches of each of the three types. Great interindividual variability was found for all three types of matches. In particular, the individual Brunswik ratios were found to vary over a broad range (from .47 to .85). That is, lightness matches were found to be far from veridical. Contrast matches were also found to be inaccurate, being on average, underestimated by a factor of 3.4. Articulation was found to essentially affect not only lightness, but contrast and brightness matches as well. No difference was found between the lightness and luminance contrast matches. While the brightness matches significantly differed from the other matches, the difference was small. Furthermore, the brightness matches were found to be subject to the same interindividual variability and the same effect of articulation. This leads to the conclusion that inexperienced observers are unable to estimate both the brightness and the luminance contrast of the light reflected from real objects lit by real lights. None of our observers perceived illumination edges purely as illumination edges: A partial Gelb effect ("partial illumination discounting") always took place. The lightness inconstancy in our experiment resulted from this partial illumination discounting. We propose an account of our results based on the two-dimensionality of achromatic colour. We argue that large interindividual variations and the effect of articulation are caused by the large ambiguity of luminance ratios in the stimulus displays used in laboratory conditions.
与“明度恒常性”这一术语所暗示的情况相反,除非场景具有高度的清晰度(即包含多种不同的反射率),否则从未发现非对称明度匹配是完美的。此外,已发现明度恒常性因不同观察者而异,并且有报告称存在指示(明度与亮度)的影响。明度恒常性难以捉摸,这给视觉科学带来了巨大挑战;在接下来的实验中我们重新审视了这些问题,该实验总共涉及44名观察者。刺激物包括一大张黑色纸张,下半部分投射有一个矩形聚光灯,上半部分印有40个不同灰度的正方形。聚光灯边缘的亮度比为25,而正方形的亮度比从2到16不等。向观察者给出了三种不同的指示:要求他们在上半部分找到一个正方形,该正方形(i)看起来好像是由聚光灯照射的那张纸制成的(明度匹配),(ii)与聚光灯边缘具有相同的亮度对比度(对比度匹配),或者(iii)与聚光灯具有相同的亮度(亮度匹配)。观察者对这三种类型的匹配各进行了10次。发现所有三种类型的匹配都存在很大的个体差异。特别是,发现个体布伦斯维克比率在很宽的范围内变化(从0.47到0.85)。也就是说,发现明度匹配远非真实。对比度匹配也被发现不准确,平均低估了3.4倍。发现清晰度不仅对明度有实质性影响,对对比度和亮度匹配也有影响。在明度和亮度对比度匹配之间未发现差异。虽然亮度匹配与其他匹配有显著差异,但差异很小。此外,发现亮度匹配也存在相同的个体差异和相同的清晰度影响。这导致得出结论,缺乏经验的观察者无法估计由真实光线照亮的真实物体反射的光的亮度和亮度对比度。我们的观察者中没有一个人将照明边缘纯粹视为照明边缘:总是会出现部分格尔伯效应(“部分照明折扣”)。我们实验中的明度不恒常性是由这种部分照明折扣导致的。我们基于消色差颜色的二维性对我们的结果提出了一种解释。我们认为,个体差异大以及清晰度的影响是由实验室条件下使用的刺激显示中亮度比的高度模糊性引起的。