Abstract

Color-based object selection — for instance, looking for ripe tomatoes in the market — places demands on both perceptual and memory processes: it is necessary to form a stable perceptual estimate of surface color from a variable visual signal, as well as to retain multiple perceptual estimates in memory while comparing objects. Nevertheless, perceptual and memory processes in the color domain are generally studied in separate research programs with the assumption that they are independent. Here, we demonstrate a strong failure of independence between color perception and memory: the effect of context on color appearance is substantially weakened by a short retention interval between a reference and test stimulus. This somewhat counterintuitive result is consistent with Bayesian estimation: as the precision of the representation of the reference surface and its context decays in memory, prior information gains more weight, causing the retained percepts to be drawn toward prior information about surface and context color. This interaction implies that to fully understand information processing in real-world color tasks, perception and memory need to be considered jointly.

Highlights

  • Surface color is an informative cue to many object properties, such as the edibility of food

  • The independence of color memory and color constancy was tested by measuring appearance and precision for hue in a 2|2

  • The color appearance of a given reference was defined as the 50th percentile of the Psychometric functions (PMF), while the discrimination threshold was defined as the difference between the 75th and 50th percentile of the PFM

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Summary

Introduction

Surface color is an informative cue to many object properties, such as the edibility of food. This task is phenomenologically easy, it places considerable demands on visual information processing. Once surface color and related object properties have been estimated for one set, these estimates have to be retained in memory while evaluating another set. This introduces a concomitant visual shortterm memory demand. Such joint employment of perceptual estimation and memory is a common feature of realworld color tasks, the two processes are rarely studied in the same paradigm. The fact that the independence assumption remains unverified, may lead to results overly specific to the study conditions; for instance, to a characterization of color memory that does not generalize to different color contexts

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