We compare an objective and a subjective performance
measure for color constancy algorithms. Eight hyper-spectral
images were rendered under a neutral reference illuminant and
four chromatic illuminants (Red, Green, Yellow, Blue). The
scenes rendered under the chromatic illuminants were color
corrected by 5 color constancy algorithms that are based on
zero-, first- and second-order image statistics. The angular
error is used as the objective performance measure for color
constancy. It estimates the chromatic mismatch between the
true and estimated illuminant vector in RGB space. A
subjective performance measure was derived from a
psychophysical experiment involving paired comparisons of the
color corrected images shown on a calibrated monitor. Eight
subjects indicated their preference with respect to color
reproduction when comparing the two images (i.e. color
constancy algorithms) against the reference image (the same
scene under neutral illumination). Our results indicate a large
negative correlation (-0.9 on average) between the objective
and subjective color constancy measures. The data suggests the
possibility for further improvement of the correlation between
the two types of performance measures.
@InProceedings{LucassenECCGIV2008,
author = "Lucassen, M. and Gijsenij, A. and Gevers, T.",
title = "Comparing Objective and Subjective Performance Measures for Color Constancy",
booktitle = "European Conference on Color in Graphics, Imaging and Vision",
year = "2008",
url = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2008/LucassenECCGIV2008",
pdf = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2008/LucassenECCGIV2008/LucassenECCGIV2008.pdf",
has_image = 1
}