In the staircase Gelb effect, five squares cut from achromatic Munsell (aM) papers 2.0, 4.0, 6.0, 8.0, and 9.5 are arranged in a row from the darkest to the lightest and illuminated by a spotlight, often referred to as “Gelb illumination”. The perceptual outcome is a compressed lightness range, from middle grey to white, or super-white. The illusion has been extensively used as a case study for the Anchoring Theory (Gilchrist et al, 1999, Psychological Review, 106, 786-834). According to such theory, the highest luminance (hL) of the configuration is assigned the value of white in the local framework. We studied the role played by such hL in the compression rate of the illusion, by manipulating the hL target – four levels: 9.5, 9.25, 9.0, and pastel yellow (Munsell 5Y 9/4 with luminance between the values for 9.25 and 9.0). Results show that the achromatic hLs are off the aM scale, appearing either luminous or super-white; the brightness of the yellow hL target appears also greater than 9.5. The compression effect drops as the hL is lowered. This “decompression” is statistically significant for targets 2.0 and 4.0 with hL 9.0 and yellow

Daneyko, O., Zavagno, D. (2013). What happens to the staircase Gelb effect when the highest luminance is not white?. In ECVP 2013, 36th European Conference on Visual Perception (pp.67-68). [Pion Ltd.].

What happens to the staircase Gelb effect when the highest luminance is not white?

ZAVAGNO, DANIELE
2013

Abstract

In the staircase Gelb effect, five squares cut from achromatic Munsell (aM) papers 2.0, 4.0, 6.0, 8.0, and 9.5 are arranged in a row from the darkest to the lightest and illuminated by a spotlight, often referred to as “Gelb illumination”. The perceptual outcome is a compressed lightness range, from middle grey to white, or super-white. The illusion has been extensively used as a case study for the Anchoring Theory (Gilchrist et al, 1999, Psychological Review, 106, 786-834). According to such theory, the highest luminance (hL) of the configuration is assigned the value of white in the local framework. We studied the role played by such hL in the compression rate of the illusion, by manipulating the hL target – four levels: 9.5, 9.25, 9.0, and pastel yellow (Munsell 5Y 9/4 with luminance between the values for 9.25 and 9.0). Results show that the achromatic hLs are off the aM scale, appearing either luminous or super-white; the brightness of the yellow hL target appears also greater than 9.5. The compression effect drops as the hL is lowered. This “decompression” is statistically significant for targets 2.0 and 4.0 with hL 9.0 and yellow
abstract + poster
Lightness, Staircase Gelb effect
English
ECVP
2013
ECVP 2013, 36th European Conference on Visual Perception
2013
42 supplement
67
68
none
Daneyko, O., Zavagno, D. (2013). What happens to the staircase Gelb effect when the highest luminance is not white?. In ECVP 2013, 36th European Conference on Visual Perception (pp.67-68). [Pion Ltd.].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/46448
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