Abstract
When recognising a surface colour, the visual system discounts the illumination, apparently by using some reference surfaces (like a spectrophotometer). To recover the illuminant colour it uses signals from different, sometimes remote, parts of the scene viewed either in sequence or in parallel. As a result, humans and animals fail to recognise the colour of a patch that is locally illuminated with a narrow light beam different in colour from the ambient illumination, but show good colour constancy when the beam envelops the surrounding scene.
The results obtained in birds distinguish them from humans and all animals hitherto investigated. The behaviour of hole-dwelling birds was studied in the wild by the method of alternative choice of entrance into experimental nesting-boxes having three entrances marked with coloured stimuli made from papers painted in different shades of blue, grey, or orange (see Maximov and Derim-Oglu, 1996 Perception
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