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Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout

Previous studies have shown that humans can discriminate spectral changes in illumination and that this sensitivity depends both on the chromatic direction of the illumination change and on the ensemble of surfaces in the scene. These studies, however, always used stimulus scenes with a fixed surfac...

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Autores principales: Radonjić, Ana, Ding, Xiaomao, Krieger, Avery, Aston, Stacey, Hurlbert, Anya C., Brainard, David H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5962298/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29904786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/18.5.11
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author Radonjić, Ana
Ding, Xiaomao
Krieger, Avery
Aston, Stacey
Hurlbert, Anya C.
Brainard, David H.
author_facet Radonjić, Ana
Ding, Xiaomao
Krieger, Avery
Aston, Stacey
Hurlbert, Anya C.
Brainard, David H.
author_sort Radonjić, Ana
collection PubMed
description Previous studies have shown that humans can discriminate spectral changes in illumination and that this sensitivity depends both on the chromatic direction of the illumination change and on the ensemble of surfaces in the scene. These studies, however, always used stimulus scenes with a fixed surface-reflectance layout. Here we compared illumination discrimination for scenes in which the surface reflectance layout remains fixed (fixed-surfaces condition) to those in which surface reflectances were shuffled randomly across scenes, but with the mean scene reflectance held approximately constant (shuffled-surfaces condition). Illumination discrimination thresholds in the fixed-surfaces condition were commensurate with previous reports. Thresholds in the shuffled-surfaces condition, however, were considerably elevated. Nonetheless, performance in the shuffled-surfaces condition exceeded that attainable through random guessing. Analysis of eye fixations revealed that in the fixed-surfaces condition, low illumination discrimination thresholds (across observers) were predicted by low overall fixation spread and high consistency of fixation location and fixated surface reflectances across trial intervals. Performance in the shuffled-surfaces condition was not systematically related to any of the eye-fixation characteristics we examined for that condition, but was correlated with performance in the fixed-surfaces condition.
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spelling pubmed-59622982018-05-24 Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout Radonjić, Ana Ding, Xiaomao Krieger, Avery Aston, Stacey Hurlbert, Anya C. Brainard, David H. J Vis Article Previous studies have shown that humans can discriminate spectral changes in illumination and that this sensitivity depends both on the chromatic direction of the illumination change and on the ensemble of surfaces in the scene. These studies, however, always used stimulus scenes with a fixed surface-reflectance layout. Here we compared illumination discrimination for scenes in which the surface reflectance layout remains fixed (fixed-surfaces condition) to those in which surface reflectances were shuffled randomly across scenes, but with the mean scene reflectance held approximately constant (shuffled-surfaces condition). Illumination discrimination thresholds in the fixed-surfaces condition were commensurate with previous reports. Thresholds in the shuffled-surfaces condition, however, were considerably elevated. Nonetheless, performance in the shuffled-surfaces condition exceeded that attainable through random guessing. Analysis of eye fixations revealed that in the fixed-surfaces condition, low illumination discrimination thresholds (across observers) were predicted by low overall fixation spread and high consistency of fixation location and fixated surface reflectances across trial intervals. Performance in the shuffled-surfaces condition was not systematically related to any of the eye-fixation characteristics we examined for that condition, but was correlated with performance in the fixed-surfaces condition. The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology 2018-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5962298/ /pubmed/29904786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/18.5.11 Text en Copyright 2018 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Article
Radonjić, Ana
Ding, Xiaomao
Krieger, Avery
Aston, Stacey
Hurlbert, Anya C.
Brainard, David H.
Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
title Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
title_full Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
title_fullStr Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
title_full_unstemmed Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
title_short Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
title_sort illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5962298/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29904786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/18.5.11
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