2010
DOI: 10.1167/10.5.26
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The role of scission in the perception of color and opacity

Abstract: Recent work has shown that the decomposition of textures into a layered representation can induce striking percepts of inhomogeneous transparency and modulate the perceived lightness of achromatic textures (B. L. Anderson & J. Winawer, 2005, 2008). It was argued that two photo-geometric principles of perceptual organization were responsible for the percepts that arise in these images: a polarity constraint that determines the relative lightness of the two layers and a transmittance anchoring principle, which i… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Whereas Khang and Zaidi (2002a) did not find any difference in the degree of constancy for objects with and without valid figural conditions for transparency, we found a clearly larger degree of constancy in the transparency condition (Faul & Falkenberg, 2015). The results of Anderson and Khang (2010) seem also in line with the assumption that perceived transparency may strongly influence the perceived color. They manipulated the relationship of a central patch to its spatial context that induced a transparent or an opaque impression in this target region.…”
Section: Relation To Color Constancysupporting
confidence: 78%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Whereas Khang and Zaidi (2002a) did not find any difference in the degree of constancy for objects with and without valid figural conditions for transparency, we found a clearly larger degree of constancy in the transparency condition (Faul & Falkenberg, 2015). The results of Anderson and Khang (2010) seem also in line with the assumption that perceived transparency may strongly influence the perceived color. They manipulated the relationship of a central patch to its spatial context that induced a transparent or an opaque impression in this target region.…”
Section: Relation To Color Constancysupporting
confidence: 78%
“…16. ency have been proposed and discussed (Metelli, 1970(Metelli, , 1974Gerbino et al, 1990;Masin, 1999;Singh & Anderson, 2002;Faul & Ekroll, 2002Kingdom, 2008Kingdom, , 2011Anderson & Khang, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(see Blakeslee & McCourt, 2004;Ripamonti & Gerbino, 2001;Spehar, Clifford, & Agostini, 2002). This is especially true when considering the novel stimuli introduced by Anderson andWinawer (2005, 2008; see also Anderson & Khang, 2010), which would be difficult to model by many existing lightness models. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that some of these effects are dependent on texture characteristics, as demonstrated here and by Poirier (2009).…”
Section: Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Note that the uniform target colored patches embedded in a variegated surround violate the conditions required for scission, and hence, homogeneous targets embedded in a variegated surround should not induce a layered scene representation. Scission should only occur when the textural properties of the target and surround match, such as when a homogeneous target is placed on a homogenous surround or when textured targets are placed on a textured surround (Anderson & Khang, 2010;Anderson & Winawer, 2005Wollschläger & Anderson, 2009). When homogeneous targets are placed on homogeneous surrounds, the colored target patches can theoretically be decomposed into an achromatic background and a more saturated chromatic overlay; i.e., the perceptual attribution of a shared achromatic component of the surround and the target is presumed to increase the perceived saturation of the target.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%