Abstract
It has been suggested (Livingstone and Hubel, 1988 Science
We designed a colour-matching experiment where ten naive observers had to adjust the intensity of a red illusory surface so that it appeared to match the intensity of the red background. The configurations used were Kanizsa squares with green inducing elements, isoluminant or not with regard to the background. Isoluminance was assessed individually for each observer by means of a classical flicker test. A brightness-matching procedure was applied to configurations of achromatic inducers on a grey background. In this case, the inducers had either all the same contrast polarity (light), or both polarities (light and dark) within a given configuration. Luminance contrast in the achromatic configuration with only one polarity was the same as in the non-isoluminant colour condition. Luminance contrasts of light and dark inducers in the mixed-polarity condition were physically balanced.
The results show that the mean point of subjective equality (PSE) of the test surface corresponds to the physical intensity of the background with equiluminant colour contrast only, indicating the absence of an apparent surface in this condition. This result supports the idea that magnocellular pathways in the human visual system mediate the neurophysiological genesis of illusory surfaces. In all the other stimulus conditions, the PSE does not correspond to the physical intensity of the background. Matching ‘errors’ are significantly stronger in the achromatic conditions, but, paradoxically, strongest in the condition with balanced contrasts of opposite polarity. This finding suggests that luminance contrast is not the only determinant of the perceived strength of illusory surfaces.
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