Color constancy algorithms are often evaluated by using a distance measure that is based on mathematical
principles, such as the angular error. However, it is unknown whether these distance measures correlate to
human vision. Therefore, the main goal of our paper is to analyze the correlation between several performance
measures and the quality, obtained by using psychophysical experiments, of the output images generated by
various color constancy algorithms. Subsequent issues that are addressed are the distribution of performance
measures, suggesting additional and alternative information that can be provided to summarize the performance
over a large set of images, and the perceptual significance of obtained improvements, i.e., the improvement
that should be obtained before the difference becomes noticeable to a human observer.
http://www.science.uva.nl/~gijsenij/
Optics InfoBase
www.colorconstancy.com@Article{GijsenijJOSA2009,
author = "Gijsenij, A. and Gevers, T. and Lucassen, M.",
title = "A Perceptual Analysis of Distance Measures for Color Constancy Algorithms",
journal = "Journal of the Optical Society of America A",
number = "10",
volume = "26",
pages = "2243--2256",
year = "2009",
url = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2009/GijsenijJOSA2009",
pdf = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2009/GijsenijJOSA2009/GijsenijJOSA2009.pdf",
has_image = 1
}