: The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities

In early 2015, a public debate about a perceptual phenomenon that impressively demonstrated the subjective nature of human perception was running round the globe: the debate about #TheDress, a poorly lit photograph of a lace dress that was perceived as white–gold by some, but as blue–black by others...

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Main Authors: Vera M. Hesslinger, Claus-Christian Carbon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-04-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669516645592
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author Vera M. Hesslinger
Claus-Christian Carbon
author_facet Vera M. Hesslinger
Claus-Christian Carbon
author_sort Vera M. Hesslinger
collection DOAJ
description In early 2015, a public debate about a perceptual phenomenon that impressively demonstrated the subjective nature of human perception was running round the globe: the debate about #TheDress, a poorly lit photograph of a lace dress that was perceived as white–gold by some, but as blue–black by others. In the present research ( N  = 48), we found that the perceptual difference between white–gold perceivers ( n 1  = 24, 12 women, M age  = 25.4 years) and blue–black perceivers ( n 2  = 24, 12 women, M age  = 24.3 years) decreased significantly when the illumination information provided by the original digital photo was reduced by means of image scrambling (Experiment 1). This indicates that the illumination information is one potentially important factor contributing to the color ambiguity of #TheDress—possibly by amplification of a slight principal difference in psychophysics of color perception which the two observer groups showed for abstract uniformly colored fields displaying a white–blue ambiguity (Experiment 2).
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spelling doaj.art-7f82ae499289494d9fb06b7ffe07ae1b2022-12-21T23:18:48ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952016-04-01710.1177/204166951664559210.1177_2041669516645592: The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue AmbiguitiesVera M. HesslingerClaus-Christian CarbonIn early 2015, a public debate about a perceptual phenomenon that impressively demonstrated the subjective nature of human perception was running round the globe: the debate about #TheDress, a poorly lit photograph of a lace dress that was perceived as white–gold by some, but as blue–black by others. In the present research ( N  = 48), we found that the perceptual difference between white–gold perceivers ( n 1  = 24, 12 women, M age  = 25.4 years) and blue–black perceivers ( n 2  = 24, 12 women, M age  = 24.3 years) decreased significantly when the illumination information provided by the original digital photo was reduced by means of image scrambling (Experiment 1). This indicates that the illumination information is one potentially important factor contributing to the color ambiguity of #TheDress—possibly by amplification of a slight principal difference in psychophysics of color perception which the two observer groups showed for abstract uniformly colored fields displaying a white–blue ambiguity (Experiment 2).https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669516645592
spellingShingle Vera M. Hesslinger
Claus-Christian Carbon
: The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities
i-Perception
title : The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities
title_full : The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities
title_fullStr : The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities
title_full_unstemmed : The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities
title_short : The Role of Illumination Information and Individual Differences in the Psychophysics of Perceiving White–Blue Ambiguities
title_sort the role of illumination information and individual differences in the psychophysics of perceiving white blue ambiguities
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669516645592
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