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Perceiving the representative surface color of real-world materials. | LitMetric

Perceiving the representative surface color of real-world materials.

Sci Rep

Department of Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Natural surfaces are more complex than the uniform ones often studied in color perception, yet we can still easily identify their representative colors.
  • The study examined how we perceive these colors using 120 images, finding that the colors matched with synthesized and randomized images were mostly consistent, despite the loss of detail in those synthetic versions.
  • The research concluded that our perception of representative color is largely influenced by the brightness of the brightest point in the image, suggesting we employ simple visual cues to assess color in real-world surfaces.

Article Abstract

Natural surfaces such as soil, grass, and skin usually involve far more complex and heterogenous structures than the perfectly uniform surfaces assumed in studies on color and material perception. Despite this, we can easily perceive the representative color of these surfaces. Here, we investigated the visual mechanisms underlying the perception of representative surface color using 120 natural images of diverse materials and their statistically synthesized images. Our matching experiments indicated that the perceived representative color revealed was not significantly different from the Portilla-Simoncelli-synthesized images or phase-randomized images except for one sample, even though the perceived shape and material properties were greatly impaired in the synthetic stimuli. The results also showed that the matched representative colors were predictable from the saturation-enhanced color of the brightest point in the image, excluding the high-intensity outliers. The results support the notion that humans judge the representative color and lightness of real-world surfaces depending on simple image measurements.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10111332PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-33563-8DOI Listing

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