Norman Liam J, Akins Kathleen, Heywood Charles A, Kentridge Robert W
Department of Psychology, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK.
Department of Philosophy, Simon Fraser University, 4604 Diamond Building, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada.
Curr Biol. 2014 Dec 1;24(23):2822-6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.10.009. Epub 2014 Nov 20.
The illumination of a scene strongly affects our perception of objects in that scene, e.g., the pages of a book illuminated by candlelight will appear quite yellow relative to other types of artificial illuminants. Yet at the same time, the reader still judges the pages as white, their surface color unaffected by the interplay of paper and illuminant. It has been shown empirically that we can indeed report two quite different interpretations of "color": one is dependent on the constant surface spectral reflectance of an object (surface color) and the other on the power of light of different wavelengths reflected from that object (reflected color). How then are these two representations related? The common view, dating from Aristotle, is that our experience of surface color is derived from reflected color or, in more familiar terms, that color perception follows from color sensation. By definition, color constancy requires that vision "discounts the illuminant"; thus, it seems reasonable that vision begins with the color of objects as they naively appear and that we infer from their appearances their surface color. Here, we question this classic view. We use metacontrast-masked priming and, by presenting the unseen prime and the visible mask under different illuminants, dissociate two ways in which the prime matched the mask: in surface color or in reflected color. We find that priming of the mask occurs when it matches the prime in surface color, not reflected color. It follows that color perception can arise without prior color sensation.
场景的光照会强烈影响我们对该场景中物体的感知,例如,与其他类型的人工照明相比,烛光下照亮的书页会显得相当黄。然而与此同时,读者仍然会将书页判断为白色,其表面颜色不受纸张和照明相互作用的影响。经验表明,我们确实可以对“颜色”有两种截然不同的解读:一种取决于物体恒定的表面光谱反射率(表面颜色),另一种取决于从该物体反射的不同波长光的强度(反射颜色)。那么这两种表征是如何关联的呢?从亚里士多德时代起的普遍观点是,我们对表面颜色的体验源自反射颜色,或者用更通俗的话说,颜色感知源自颜色感觉。根据定义,颜色恒常性要求视觉“忽略照明因素”;因此,视觉从物体天真呈现的颜色开始,并且我们从它们的外观推断出它们的表面颜色,这似乎是合理的。在这里,我们对这种经典观点提出质疑。我们使用元对比掩蔽启动,并通过在不同照明条件下呈现不可见的启动刺激和可见的掩蔽刺激,区分启动刺激与掩蔽刺激匹配的两种方式:表面颜色匹配或反射颜色匹配。我们发现,当掩蔽刺激与启动刺激在表面颜色上匹配而非反射颜色上匹配时,会出现掩蔽启动效应。由此可见,颜色感知可以在没有先前颜色感觉的情况下产生。