Kobayashi Yuki, Morikawa Kazunori
School of Human Sciences, Osaka University, Japan; Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan.
School of Human Sciences, Osaka University, Japan.
Perception. 2019 Jun;48(6):500-514. doi: 10.1177/0301006619847590. Epub 2019 May 13.
The human visual system can extract information on surface reflectance (lightness) from light intensity; this, however, confounds information on reflectance and illumination. We hypothesized that the visual system, to solve this lightness problem, utilizes the internally held prior assumption that illumination falls from above. Experiment 1 showed that an upward-facing surface is perceived to be darker than a downward-facing surface, proving our hypothesis. Experiment 2 showed the same results in the absence of explicit illumination cues. The effect of the light-from-left prior assumption was not observed in Experiment 3. The upward- and downward-facing surface stimuli in Experiments 1 and 2 showed no difference in a two-dimensional configuration or three-dimensional structure, and the participants' perceived lightness appeared to be affected by the observers' prior assumption that illumination is always from above. Other studies have not accounted for this illusory effect, and this study's finding provides additional insights into the study of lightness perception.
人类视觉系统能够从光强度中提取有关表面反射率(明度)的信息;然而,这混淆了有关反射率和光照的信息。我们假设,视觉系统为了解决这个明度问题,利用了其内在持有的先验假设,即光照来自上方。实验1表明,朝上的表面比朝下的表面看起来更暗,证明了我们的假设。实验2表明,在没有明确光照线索的情况下也得到了相同的结果。实验3中未观察到来自左侧光照的先验假设的影响。实验1和实验2中朝上和朝下的表面刺激在二维构型或三维结构上没有差异,参与者感知到的明度似乎受到观察者的先验假设(即光照总是来自上方)的影响。其他研究没有考虑到这种错觉效应,本研究的发现为明度感知的研究提供了更多见解。