Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6202961 Vision Research 2016 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Variation in spatial cone-excitation ratios with natural scene illumination geometry.•Invariance of short-range ratios, supporting stable surface-color inferences.•Equivalence of spectral illumination changes and natural changes with even geometry.

The illumination in natural environments varies through the day. Stable inferences about surface color might be supported by spatial ratios of cone excitations from the reflected light, but their invariance has been quantified only for global changes in illuminant spectrum. The aim here was to test their invariance under natural changes in both illumination spectrum and geometry, especially in the distribution of shadows. Time-lapse hyperspectral radiance images were acquired from five outdoor vegetated and nonvegetated scenes. From each scene, 10,000 pairs of points were sampled randomly and ratios measured across time. Mean relative deviations in ratios were generally large, but when sampling was limited to short distances or moderate time intervals, they fell below the level for detecting violations in ratio invariance. When illumination changes with uneven geometry were excluded, they fell further, to levels obtained with global changes in illuminant spectrum alone. Within sampling constraints, ratios of cone excitations, and also of opponent-color combinations, provide an approximately invariant signal for stable surface-color inferences, despite spectral and geometric variations in scene illumination.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
Authors
, , ,