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Related Concept Videos

Perceptual Constancy01:12

Perceptual Constancy

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Perceptual constancy is the ability to recognize that objects remain consistent and unchanged even when their appearance varies due to changes in sensory input. There are four main types of perceptual constancy: size constancy, shape constancy, color constancy, and brightness constancy.
Size constancy is the recognition that an object remains the same size, even when its image on the retina changes. For instance, a bus is perceived to be large enough to carry people, even if it looks tiny from...
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Color Vision01:24

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Color perception begins in the retina, the light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye. Two main theories explain how colors are seen: the trichromatic theory and the opponent-process theory. The trichromatic theory, proposed by Thomas Young in 1802 and extended by Hermann von Helmholtz in 1852, suggests that color vision is based on three types of cone receptors in the retina. These cones are sensitive to different but overlapping ranges of wavelengths corresponding to red, blue, and green.
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At the molecular level, visual signals trigger transformations in photopigment molecules, resulting in changes in the photoreceptor cell's membrane potential. The photon's energy level is denoted by its wavelength, with each specific wavelength of visible light associated with a distinct color. The spectral range of visible light, classified as electromagnetic radiation, spans from 380 to 720 nm. Electromagnetic radiation wavelengths exceeding 720 nm fall under the infrared category,...
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If you want to understand how behavior occurs, one of the best ways to gain information is to simply observe the behavior in its natural context. However, people might change their behavior in unexpected ways if they know they are being observed. How do researchers obtain accurate information when people tend to hide their natural behavior? As an example, imagine that your professor asks everyone in your class to raise their hand if they always wash their hands after using the restroom. Chances...
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Perception is influenced by perceptual set, context, motivation, and emotion. Perceptual set, or perceptual expectancy, refers to the tendency to perceive things in a particular way, influenced by previous experiences and expectations. This phenomenon affects the interpretation of stimuli, creating a set of mental tendencies and assumptions that impact sensory perceptions of sound, taste, touch, and sight.
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Gestalt principles provide a framework for understanding how humans perceive objects as unified wholes within their context. These principles are essential in explaining the cognitive processes that make sense of complex visual stimuli by organizing them into coherent groups. One fundamental principle is proximity, which posits that objects located close to each other are perceived as a collective group. For instance, when dots are positioned near one another, the visual system interprets them...
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Visualizing Visual Adaptation
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Color constancy in real-world settings.

Karl R Gegenfurtner1,2, David Weiss1,3, Marina Bloj4,5

  • 1Department of Psychology, Giessen University, Giessen, Germany.

Journal of Vision
|February 27, 2024
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Color constancy, the brain's ability to perceive stable object colors under varying light, is near-perfect in real-world, natural tasks. This visual perception is limited by memory, not sensory uncertainty.

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Area of Science:

  • Visual perception
  • Color science
  • Cognitive psychology

Background:

  • Color constancy enables stable color perception despite changing illumination.
  • The visual system's color constancy performance is debated, with lab studies showing variable results (15-80%).
  • Real-world color constancy is crucial for object recognition and color naming.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate color constancy performance in a naturalistic task and environment.
  • To determine if color constancy is as robust in real-world conditions as object appearance suggests.
  • To assess the impact of sensory uncertainty versus memory limitations on color constancy.

Main Methods:

  • Participants identified the color of a familiar, absent object in an office setting.
  • The experiment used five different illumination conditions.
  • Color matching was performed using Munsell color chips.

Main Results:

  • Participants demonstrated near-perfect color constancy, consistently matching the object's color across illuminations.
  • High color constancy was achieved despite substantial changes in the light reaching the eye.
  • Performance was limited by visual memory capacity, not sensory processing uncertainty.

Conclusions:

  • Color constancy can be exceptionally effective under naturalistic conditions.
  • The visual system's ability to maintain stable color perception is robust in everyday scenarios.
  • Visual memory, rather than sensory limitations, constrains the precision of color constancy.