Coia Andrew J, Shevell Steven K
J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis. 2018 Apr 1;35(4):B223-B230. doi: 10.1364/JOSAA.35.00B223.
The color appearance of a light depends on variation in the complete visual field over both space and time. In the spatial domain, a chromatic stimulus within a patterned chromatic surround can appear a different hue than the same stimulus within a uniform surround. In the temporal domain, a stimulus presented as an element of a continuously changing chromaticity can appear a different color compared to the identical stimulus, presented simultaneously but viewed alone. This is the flash-lag effect for color, which has an analog in the domain of motion: a pulsed object seen alone can appear to lag behind an identical pulsed object that is an element of a motion sequence. Studies of the flash-lag effect for motion have considered whether it is mediated by a neural representation for the moving physical stimulus or, alternatively, for the perceived motion. The current study addresses this question for the flash-lag effect for color by testing whether the color flash lag depends on a representation of only the changing chromatic stimulus or, alternatively, its color percept, which can be altered by chromatic induction.
baseline measurements for spatial chromatic induction determined the chromaticity of a flashed ring within a uniform surround that matched a flashed ring within a patterned surround. Baseline measurements for the color flash-lag effect determined the chromaticity of a pulsed ring presented alone (within a uniform surround) that matched a pulsed ring presented in a sequence of changing chromaticity over time (also within a uniform surround). Finally, the main experiments combined chromatic induction from a patterned surround and the flash-lag effect, in three conditions: (1) both the changing and pulsed rings were within a patterned chromatic surround; (2) the changing ring was within a patterned surround and the pulsed ring within a uniform surround; and (3) the changing ring was within a uniform surround and the pulsed ring within a patterned surround.
the flash-lag measurements for a changing chromaticity were affected by perceptual changes induced by the surrounding chromatic pattern. Thus, the color shifts induced by a chromatic surround are incorporated in the neural representation mediating the flash-lag effect for color.
光的颜色外观取决于整个视野在空间和时间上的变化。在空间领域,图案化彩色背景中的彩色刺激与均匀背景中的相同刺激相比,可能会呈现出不同的色调。在时间领域,作为连续变化色度元素呈现的刺激与同时呈现但单独观察的相同刺激相比,可能会呈现出不同的颜色。这就是颜色的闪光滞后效应,它在运动领域有类似情况:单独看到的脉冲物体似乎会滞后于作为运动序列元素的相同脉冲物体。对运动的闪光滞后效应的研究考虑了它是由对移动物理刺激的神经表征介导,还是由对感知运动的神经表征介导。当前的研究通过测试颜色闪光滞后是否仅取决于变化的彩色刺激的表征,或者相反,取决于其颜色感知(可由颜色诱导改变),来解决颜色的闪光滞后效应的这个问题。
空间颜色诱导的基线测量确定了均匀背景中闪光环的色度,该色度与图案化背景中的闪光环相匹配。颜色闪光滞后效应的基线测量确定了单独呈现(在均匀背景中)的脉冲环的色度,该色度与随时间变化的色度序列中呈现的脉冲环相匹配(也在均匀背景中)。最后,主要实验在三种条件下结合了来自图案化背景的颜色诱导和闪光滞后效应:(1)变化环和脉冲环都在图案化彩色背景中;(2)变化环在图案化背景中,脉冲环在均匀背景中;(3)变化环在均匀背景中,脉冲环在图案化背景中。
色度变化的闪光滞后测量受到周围彩色图案引起的感知变化的影响。因此,彩色背景引起的颜色偏移被纳入介导颜色闪光滞后效应的神经表征中。