Granzier et al., 2005 - Google Patents
Luminance—Color correlation is not used to estimate the color of the illuminationGranzier et al., 2005
View HTML- Document ID
- 5918664725780220164
- Author
- Granzier J
- Brenner E
- Cornelissen F
- Smeets J
- Publication year
- Publication venue
- Journal of Vision
External Links
Snippet
Humans can identify the colors of objects fairly consistently, despite considerable variations in the spectral composition of the illumination. It has been suggested that the correlation between luminance and color within a scene helps to disentangle the influences of …
- 238000005286 illumination 0 title abstract description 22
Classifications
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61B—DIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
- A61B3/00—Apparatus for testing the eyes; Instruments for examining the eyes
- A61B3/02—Subjective types, i.e. testing apparatus requiring the active assistance of the patient
- A61B3/06—Subjective types, i.e. testing apparatus requiring the active assistance of the patient for testing light sensitivity, e.g. adaptation; for testing colour vision
- A61B3/066—Subjective types, i.e. testing apparatus requiring the active assistance of the patient for testing light sensitivity, e.g. adaptation; for testing colour vision for testing colour vision
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
Cornelissen et al. | Simultaneous colour constancy revisited: an analysis of viewing strategies | |
Olkkonen et al. | Categorical color constancy for real surfaces | |
Granzier et al. | The effects of surface gloss and roughness on color constancy for real 3-D objects | |
Giesel et al. | Color appearance of real objects varying in material, hue, and shape | |
Klauke et al. | “Tilt” in color space: hue changes induced by chromatic surrounds | |
Aston et al. | What# theDress reveals about the role of illumination priors in color perception and color constancy | |
Allred et al. | Lightness perception in high dynamic range images: Local and remote luminance effects | |
Granzier et al. | Luminance—Color correlation is not used to estimate the color of the illumination | |
Radonjić et al. | Color constancy supports cross-illumination color selection | |
Werner et al. | Asymmetries in the time-course of chromatic adaptation and the significance of contrast | |
Yang et al. | Surface color perception under two illuminants: The second illuminant reduces color constancy | |
Granzier et al. | Can illumination estimates provide the basis for color constancy? | |
Witzel et al. | Uncertainty of sensory signal explains variation of color constancy | |
Hugrass et al. | Temporal brightness illusion changes color perception of “the dress” | |
Toscani et al. | Foveal to peripheral extrapolation of brightness within objects | |
Blakeslee et al. | Coming to terms with lightness and brightness: Effects of stimulus configuration and instructions on brightness and lightness judgments | |
Ling et al. | Color and size interactions in a real 3D object similarity task | |
Wedge-Roberts et al. | Specular highlights improve color constancy when other cues are weakened | |
Radonjić et al. | Illumination discrimination in the absence of a fixed surface-reflectance layout | |
Golz | The role of chromatic scene statistics in color constancy: Spatial integration | |
Brenner et al. | Chromatic induction and the layout of colours within a complex scene | |
Khang et al. | Accuracy of color scission for spectral transparencies | |
Otazu et al. | The effect of luminance differences on color assimilation | |
Yamauchi et al. | Depth information affects judgment of the surface-color mode appearance | |
Schultz et al. | Color constancy and hue scaling |