Literature DB >> 17950398

Geometric-optical illusions at isoluminance.

Kai Hamburger1, Thorsten Hansen, Karl R Gegenfurtner.   

Abstract

The idea of a largely segregated processing of color and form was initially supported by observations that geometric-optical illusions vanish under isoluminance. However, this finding is inconsistent with some psychophysical studies and also with physiological evidence showing that color and luminance are processed together by largely overlapping sets of neurons in the LGN, in V1, and in extrastriate areas. Here we examined the strength of nine geometric-optical illusions under isoluminance (Delboeuf, Ebbinghaus, Hering, Judd, Müller-Lyer, Poggendorff, Ponzo, Vertical, Zöllner). Subjects interactively manipulated computer-generated line drawings to counteract the illusory effect. In all cases, illusions presented under isoluminance (both for colors drawn from the cardinal L-M or S-(L+M) directions of DKL color space) were as effective as the luminance versions (both for high and low contrast). The magnitudes of the illusion effects were highly correlated across subjects for the different conditions. In two additional experiments we determined that the strong illusions observed under isoluminance were not due to individual deviations from the photometric point of isoluminance or due to chromatic aberrations. Our findings show that our conscious percept is affected similarly for both isoluminance and luminance conditions, suggesting that the joint processing for chromatic and luminance defined contours may extend well beyond early visual areas.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17950398     DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2007.09.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vision Res        ISSN: 0042-6989            Impact factor:   1.886


  10 in total

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2.  Visual context processing in schizophrenia.

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4.  Boundary contour-based surface integration affected by color.

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Review 5.  Color in the cortex: single- and double-opponent cells.

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8.  Looking at two paintings at once: Luminance edges can gate colors.

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Review 9.  Visual Illusions: An Interesting Tool to Investigate Developmental Dyslexia and Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Authors:  Simone Gori; Massimo Molteni; Andrea Facoetti
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10.  Build Your Own Equiluminance Helmet.

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  10 in total

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