Shadow-compatibility of simultaneous lightness contrast is discussed by Alexander D Logvinenko and Paola Bressan, with examples claiming to provide a test of the hypothesis.
LogvinenkoA DKaneJRossD A, 2002“Is lightness induction a pictorial illusion?”Perception3173–82
4.
AdelsonE H, 2000“Lightness perception and lightness illusions”, in The New Cognitive Neurosciences Ed. GazzanigaM (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press) pp 339–351
LogvinenkoA D, 2002“The anchoring effect in lightness perception”Neuroscience Letters334(1) 5–8
12.
LogvinenkoA DKaneJRossD A, 2002“Is lightness induction a pictorial illusion?”Perception3173–82
13.
LogvinenkoA DRossD A, 2002“Two types of simultaneous lightness contrast”Perception31Supplement, 6
14.
PeromaaT LLaurinenP I, 2002“Sinusoidal surrounds elicit both simultaneous contrast and assimilation”Perception31Supplement, 183
15.
ZaidiQYoshimiBFlaniganNCanovaA, 1992“Lateral interactions within color mechanisms in simultaneous induced contrast”Vision Research321695–1707
16.
BlakesleeBMcCourtM E, 1997“Similar mechanisms underlie simultaneous brightness contrast and grating induction”Vision Research372849–2869
17.
BlakesleeBMcCourtM E, 1999“A multiscale spatial filtering account of the White effect, simultaneous brightness contrast and grating induction”Vision Research394361–4377
BressanP, “The place of white in a world of greys: a double-anchoring theory of lightness perception” (submitted)
20.
GilchristAKossyfidisCBonatoFAgostiniTCataliottiJLiXSpeharBAnnanVEconomouE, 1999“An anchoring theory of lightness perception”Psychological Review106795–834
21.
LogvinenkoA D, 2002“The anchoring effect in lightness perception in humans”Neuroscience Letters3345–8
22.
NewsonL J, 1958“Some principles governing changes in the apparent lightness of test surfaces isolated from their normal backgrounds”Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology1082–95