News Release

Brightness and darkness as perceptual dimensions

Peer-Reviewed Publication

PLOS

A common-sense assumption concerning visual perception states that brightness and darkness cannot coexist at a given spatial location. One corollary of this assumption is that achromatic colors, or perceived grey shades, are contained in a one-dimensional (1-D) space varying from bright to dark. The results of many previous psychophysical studies suggest, by contrast, that achromatic colors are represented as points in a color space composed of two or more perceptual dimensions. The nature of these perceptual dimensions, however, presently remains unclear.

In a new study, publishing in PLoS Computational Biology on October 19, 2007, researchers Vladusich, Lucassen and Cornelissen from the University of Groningen and the Department of Human Interfaces, of the Netherlands, provide evidence that brightness and darkness form the dimensions of a two-dimensional (2-D) achromatic color space.

This color space may play a role in the representation of object surfaces viewed against natural backgrounds, which simultaneously induce both brightness and darkness signals. The researchers’ 2-D model generalizes to the chromatic dimensions of color perception, indicating that redness and greenness (blueness and yellowness) also form perceptual dimensions. Collectively, these findings suggest that human color space is composed of six dimensions, rather than the conventional three.

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For demos and more, please see http://brightnessdarkness.blogspot.com/ (after the embargo has ended).

CITATION: Vladusich T, Lucassen MP, Cornelissen FW (2007) Brightness and darkness as perceptual dimensions. PLoS Comput Biol 3(10): e179. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030179

CONTACT:

Tony Vladusich
E-Mail: thevlad@bu.edu

PLEASE MENTION THE OPEN ACCESS JOURNAL PLoS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY (www.ploscompbiol.org) AS THE SOURCE FOR THIS ARTICLE AND PROVIDE A LINK TO THE FREELY AVAILABLE TEXT. THANK YOU.

PLoS Computational Biology is an open-access, peer-reviewed journal published weekly by the Public Library of Science (PLoS) as the official journal of the International Society for Computational Biology (ISCB).


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