Literature DB >> 24323269

Effects of chromatic image statistics on illumination induced color differences.

Marcel P Lucassen, Theo Gevers, Arjan Gijsenij, Niels Dekker.   

Abstract

We measure the color fidelity of visual scenes that are rendered under different (simulated) illuminants and shown on a calibrated LCD display. Observers make triad illuminant comparisons involving the renderings from two chromatic test illuminants and one achromatic reference illuminant shown simultaneously. Four chromatic test illuminants are used: two along the daylight locus (yellow and blue), and two perpendicular to it (red and green). The observers select the rendering having the best color fidelity, thereby indirectly judging which of the two test illuminants induces the smallest color differences compared to the reference. Both multicolor test scenes and natural scenes are studied. The multicolor scenes are synthesized and represent ellipsoidal distributions in CIELAB chromaticity space having the same mean chromaticity but different chromatic orientations. We show that, for those distributions, color fidelity is best when the vector of the illuminant change (pointing from neutral to chromatic) is parallel to the major axis of the scene's chromatic distribution. For our selection of natural scenes, which generally have much broader chromatic distributions, we measure a higher color fidelity for the yellow and blue illuminants than for red and green. Scrambled versions of the natural images are also studied to exclude possible semantic effects. We quantitatively predict the average observer response (i.e., the illuminant probability) with four types of models, differing in the extent to which they incorporate information processing by the visual system. Results show different levels of performance for the models, and different levels for the multicolor scenes and the natural scenes. Overall, models based on the scene averaged color difference have the best performance. We discuss how color constancy algorithms may be improved by exploiting knowledge of the chromatic distribution of the visual scene.

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24323269     DOI: 10.1364/JOSAA.30.001871

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis        ISSN: 1084-7529            Impact factor:   2.129


  2 in total

1.  Illumination discrimination for chromatically biased illuminations: Implications for color constancy.

Authors:  Stacey Aston; Ana Radonjic; David H Brainard; Anya C Hurlbert
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2019-03-01       Impact factor: 2.240

2.  Computational-observer analysis of illumination discrimination.

Authors:  Xiaomao Ding; Ana Radonjic; Nicolas P Cottaris; Haomiao Jiang; Brian A Wandell; David H Brainard
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2019-07-01       Impact factor: 2.240

  2 in total

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