Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?

Previous results suggest that the glossiness of a surface is systematically underestimated when adjacent highlights from different light sources overlap to such an extent that they appear as a single, expanded highlight. Here we investigated how the availability of color- and motion-induced informat...

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Main Authors: Gunnar Wendt, Franz Faul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669518803964
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spelling doaj-2bbed9771d2a46858fc51aeeff0b8c732020-11-25T03:45:05ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952018-10-01910.1177/2041669518803964Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?Gunnar WendtFranz FaulPrevious results suggest that the glossiness of a surface is systematically underestimated when adjacent highlights from different light sources overlap to such an extent that they appear as a single, expanded highlight. Here we investigated how the availability of color- and motion-induced information, which may help to unravel such merged highlights, affects gloss constancy. We used images of computer-generated scenes where a complex 3D object made of glossy material was illuminated by three point light sources, which had varying distances to each other. The point lights were either all achromatic or they differed clearly in their color and the test object was either presented statically or rotating. The subjects had to adjust the smoothness of a match object illuminated by a single achromatic point light so that it appeared to have the same glossiness as the test object. The results show that color information contributes to gloss constancy in this situation: If it was available, the perceived glossiness remained almost invariant with changes in the degree of overlap between the highlights. This suggests that highlights of different color are processed separately. Motion information had no such effect but only led to a general increase in perceived glossiness.https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669518803964
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gunnar Wendt
Franz Faul
spellingShingle Gunnar Wendt
Franz Faul
Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?
i-Perception
author_facet Gunnar Wendt
Franz Faul
author_sort Gunnar Wendt
title Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?
title_short Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?
title_full Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?
title_fullStr Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?
title_full_unstemmed Can Color and Motion Information Be Used to Disentangle the Influence of Multiple Light Sources on Gloss Perception?
title_sort can color and motion information be used to disentangle the influence of multiple light sources on gloss perception?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Previous results suggest that the glossiness of a surface is systematically underestimated when adjacent highlights from different light sources overlap to such an extent that they appear as a single, expanded highlight. Here we investigated how the availability of color- and motion-induced information, which may help to unravel such merged highlights, affects gloss constancy. We used images of computer-generated scenes where a complex 3D object made of glossy material was illuminated by three point light sources, which had varying distances to each other. The point lights were either all achromatic or they differed clearly in their color and the test object was either presented statically or rotating. The subjects had to adjust the smoothness of a match object illuminated by a single achromatic point light so that it appeared to have the same glossiness as the test object. The results show that color information contributes to gloss constancy in this situation: If it was available, the perceived glossiness remained almost invariant with changes in the degree of overlap between the highlights. This suggests that highlights of different color are processed separately. Motion information had no such effect but only led to a general increase in perceived glossiness.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669518803964
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