The effect of surface gloss on categorical color constancy in real scenes

Perception. 2023 Apr;52(4):238-254. doi: 10.1177/03010066231151386. Epub 2023 Feb 14.

Abstract

Categorical color constancy has been widely investigated and found to be very robust. As one of object material properties, the surface gloss was found to barely contribute to color constancy in a natural viewing condition. In this study, the effect of surface gloss on categorical color constancy was investigated by asking eight observers to categorize 208 Munsell matte surfaces and 260 Munsell glossy surfaces under D65, F, and TL84 illuminants in a viewing chamber with a uniform gray background. A color constancy index based on the centroid shift of the color category was used to evaluate color constancy degree of each color category across illumination changes from D65 to F or TL84 illuminant. The result showed that both matte and glossy surfaces showed almost perfect color constancy on all color categories under F and TL84 illuminants, and there was no significant difference between them. This result suggests that surface gloss has little effect on categorical color constancy in a uniform gray background where the local surround cue was present, which is consistent with the previous findings.

Keywords: color categorization; color constancy; color vision; real scenes; surface gloss.

MeSH terms

  • Color
  • Color Perception*
  • Humans
  • Lighting*
  • Photic Stimulation