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Bias effects of short- and long-term color memory for unique objectsBloj, Marina, Weiß, D., Gegenfurtner, K.R. 2016 January 1927 (has links)
Yes / Are objects remembered with a more saturated color? Some of the evidence supporting this statement comes from research using “memory colors”—the typical colors of particular objects, for example, the green of grass. The problematic aspect of these findings is that many different exemplars exist, some of which might exhibit a higher saturation than the one measured by the experimenter. Here we avoid this problem by using unique personal items and comparing long- and short-term color memory matches (in hue, value, and chroma) with those obtained with the object present. Our results, on average, confirm that objects are remembered as more saturated than they are.
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Color constancy improves for real 3D objectsHedrich, Monika, Bloj, Marina, Ruppertsberg, Alexa I. January 2009 (has links)
No / In this study human color constancy was tested for two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) setups with real
objects and lights. Four different illuminant changes, a natural selection task and a wide choice of target colors were used.
We found that color constancy was better when the target color was learned as a 3D object in a cue-rich 3D scene than in a
2D setup. This improvement was independent of the target color and the illuminant change. We were not able to find any
evidence that frequently experienced illuminant changes are better compensated for than unusual ones. Normalizing
individual color constancy hit rates by the corresponding color memory hit rates yields a color constancy index, which is
indicative of observers¿ true ability to compensate for illuminant changes.
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Human colour perception : a psychophysical study of human colour perception for real and computer-simulated two-dimensional and three-dimensional objectsHedrich, Monika January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Human colour perception. A psychophysical study of human colour perception for real and computer-simulated two-dimensional and three-dimensional objects.Hedrich, Monika January 2009 (has links)
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
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