The Effects of Luminance Boundaries on Color Perception

Abstract

When a suprathreshold luminance flash, presented as an increment on a larger background field, accompanies a circular equiluminant chromatic flash at the same spatial location, the chromatic threshold is reduced by about two-fold. This facilitation results from the clearly-visible edges of the luminance flash (the 'pedestal') serving to demarcate the test region, segregating it from its surround. Signal detection experiments show that this facilitation does not occur because the contour reduces the spatio-temporal detection uncertainty of the observer. Partial and incomplete luminance contours produce partial facilitation. An illusory contour pattern can produce the full facilitation effect, measured with a forced-choice method. Recent experiments show that a thin luminance line which bisects the test region produces weak facilitation, the amount of which varies slightly with line length. This result poses a challenge to simple models of the facilitation mechanism, since the line does not demarcate two differently colored regions. The facilitation effect can be used as a rigorous means of probing the way in which low-level visual attributes (edges, color) interact at higher levels. Keywords: Psychophysiology; Visual perception.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 12, 1990
Accession Number
ADA221544

Entities

People

  • C. F. Stromeyer Iii
  • R. T. Eskew Jr.
  • Richard E. Kronauer

Organizations

  • Harvard University

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Adaptive Systems
  • Boundaries
  • Contrast
  • Detection
  • Detectors
  • Luminance
  • Modulation
  • Motion Detectors
  • Observers
  • Parallel Computing
  • Parallel Processing
  • Perception
  • Signal Detection
  • Societies
  • Software Development
  • Universities
  • Visual Perception

Readers

  • Vision Science/Vision Psychology/Cognitive Neuroscience.