Bramwell D I, Hurlbert A C
Medical School, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK.
Perception. 1996;25(2):229-41. doi: 10.1068/p250229.
Colour constancy is typically measured with techniques involving asymmetric matching by adjustment, in which the observer views two scenes under different illuminants and adjusts the colour of a reference patch in one to match a test patch in the other. This technique involves an unnatural task, requiring the observer to predict and adjust colour appearance under an illumination shift. Natural colour constancy is more a simple matter of determining whether a colour is the same as or different from that seen under different illumination conditions. There are also technical disadvantages to the method of matching by adjustment, particularly when used to measure colour constancy in complex scenes. Therefore, we have developed and tested a two-dimensional method of constant-stimuli, forced-choice matching paradigm for measuring colour constancy. Observers view test and reference scenes haploscopically and simultaneously, each eye maintaining separate adaptation throughout a session. On each trial, a pair of test and reference patches against multicoloured backgrounds are presented, the reference patch colours being selected from a two-dimensional grid of displayable colours around the point of perfect colour constancy. The observer's task is to respond "same" or "different". Fitting a two-dimensional Gaussian to the percentage of "different" responses yields (1) the subjective colour-constancy point, (2) the discrimination ellipse centred on this point, and (3) a map of changes in sensitivity to chromatic differences induced by the illuminant shift. The subjective colour-constancy point measured in this way shows smaller deviations from perfect colour constancy-under conditions of monocular adaptation-than previously reported; discrimination ellipses are several times larger than standard MacAdam ellipses; and chromatic sensitivity is independent of the direction of the illuminant shift, for broad distributions of background colours.
颜色恒常性通常采用通过调整进行不对称匹配的技术来测量,在这种技术中,观察者在不同照明条件下观察两个场景,并调整其中一个场景中参考色块的颜色,使其与另一个场景中的测试色块匹配。这种技术涉及一项不自然的任务,要求观察者预测并调整照明变化下的颜色外观。自然颜色恒常性更多地是一个简单的问题,即确定一种颜色与在不同照明条件下看到的颜色是否相同或不同。通过调整进行匹配的方法在技术上也存在缺点,特别是在用于测量复杂场景中的颜色恒常性时。因此,我们开发并测试了一种用于测量颜色恒常性的二维恒定刺激、迫选匹配范式。观察者通过单眼视觉同时观察测试场景和参考场景,在整个实验过程中每只眼睛保持独立适应。在每次试验中,会呈现一对置于多色背景上的测试色块和参考色块,参考色块的颜色是从围绕完美颜色恒常性点的二维可显示颜色网格中选取的。观察者的任务是回答“相同”或“不同”。将二维高斯函数拟合到“不同”反应的百分比,可得到:(1)主观颜色恒常性点;(2)以该点为中心的辨别椭圆;(3)由照明变化引起的对色差敏感度变化的图谱。在单眼适应条件下,以这种方式测量的主观颜色恒常性点显示出与完美颜色恒常性的偏差比以前报道的要小;辨别椭圆比标准的麦克亚当椭圆大几倍;对于广泛分布的背景颜色,色差敏感度与照明变化的方向无关。