
Color assimilation with bichromatic contours was quantified for spatial extents ranging from von Bezold-type color assimilation to the watercolor effect. The magnitude and direction of assimilative hue change was measured as a function of the width of a rectangular stimulus. Assimilation was quantified by hue cancellation. Large hue shifts were required to null the color of stimuli ≤9.3 min of arc in width, with an exponential decrease for stimuli increasing up to 7.4 deg. When stimuli were viewed through an achromatizing lens, the magnitude of the assimilation effect was reduced for narrow stimuli, but not for wide ones. These results demonstrate that chromatic aberration may account, in part, for color assimilation over small, but not large, surface areas.
Light, Vision, Biological Psychology, 150, Chromatic aberration, Dark Adaptation, Models, Psychological, Watercolor Effect, Color assimilation, Contrast Sensitivity, [SCCO]Cognitive science, Models, Vision, Monocular, Psychophysics, Psychology, Humans, Cognitive and computational psychology, Psychological Tests, Vision, Binocular, Watercolor Effect Color assimilation Chromatic aberration, Experimental Psychology, [SCCO] Cognitive science, Binocular, Monocular, Psychological, Biological psychology, Cognitive Sciences, Cognitive and Computational Psychology, Color Perception, Photic Stimulation
Light, Vision, Biological Psychology, 150, Chromatic aberration, Dark Adaptation, Models, Psychological, Watercolor Effect, Color assimilation, Contrast Sensitivity, [SCCO]Cognitive science, Models, Vision, Monocular, Psychophysics, Psychology, Humans, Cognitive and computational psychology, Psychological Tests, Vision, Binocular, Watercolor Effect Color assimilation Chromatic aberration, Experimental Psychology, [SCCO] Cognitive science, Binocular, Monocular, Psychological, Biological psychology, Cognitive Sciences, Cognitive and Computational Psychology, Color Perception, Photic Stimulation
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