Performance measures for quantifying human color
constancy and computational color constancy are very
different. The former relate to measurements on individual
object colors whereas the latter relate to the accuracy of the
estimated illuminant. To bridge this gap, we propose a
psychophysical method in which observers judge the global
color fidelity of the visual scene rendered under different
illuminants. In each experimental trial, the scene is rendered
under three illuminants, two chromatic test illuminants and
one neutral reference illuminant. Observers indicate which
of the two test illuminants leads to better color fidelity in
comparison to the reference illuminant. Here we study
multicolor scenes with chromatic distributions that are
differently oriented in color space, while having the same
average chromaticity. We show that when these
distributions are rendered under colored illumination they
lead to different perceptual estimates of the color fidelity.
@InProceedings{LucassenWPVSA2011,
author = "Lucassen, M. and Gevers, T. and Gijsenij, A.",
title = "Color Fidelity of Chromatic Distributions by Triad Illuminant Comparison",
booktitle = "IEEE IVMSP Workshop: Perception and Visual Signal Analysis",
year = "2011",
url = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2011/LucassenWPVSA2011",
pdf = "https://ivi.fnwi.uva.nl/isis/publications/2011/LucassenWPVSA2011/LucassenWPVSA2011.pdf",
has_image = 1
}