Influence of optical material properties on the perception of liquids

被引:36
作者
van Assen, Jan Jaap R. [1 ]
Fleming, Roland W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Justus Liebig Univ Giessen, Dept Psychol, Giessen, Germany
关键词
material appearance; viscosity; liquid; texture; recognition; SURFACE-REFLECTANCE; VISUAL-PERCEPTION; SEEING LIQUIDS; SHAPE; ILLUMINATION; TEXTURE; GLOSS;
D O I
10.1167/16.15.12
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
In everyday life we encounter a wide range of liquids (e.g., water, custard, toothpaste) with distinctive optical appearances and viscosities. Optical properties (e.g., color, translucency) are physically independent of viscosity, but, based on experience with real liquids, we may associate specific appearances (e.g., water, caramel) with certain viscosities. Conversely, the visual system may discount optical properties, enabling viscosity constancy based primarily on the liquid's shape and motion. We investigated whether optical characteristics affect the perception of viscosity and other properties of liquids. We simulated pouring liquids with viscosities ranging from water to molten glass and rendered them with nine different optical characteristics. In Experiment 1, observers (a) adjusted a match stimulus until it had the same perceived viscosity as a test stimulus with different optical properties, and (b) rated six physical properties of the test stimuli (runniness, shininess, sliminess, stickiness, warmth, wetness). We tested moving and static stimuli. In Experiment 2, observers had to associate names with every liquid in the stimulus set. We find that observers' viscosity matches correlated strongly with the true viscosities and that optical properties had almost no effect. However, some ratings of liquid properties did show substantial interactions between viscosity and optical properties. Observers associate liquid names primarily with optical cues, although some materials are associated with a specific viscosity or combination of viscosity and optics. These results suggest viscosity is inferred primarily from shape and motion cues but that optical characteristics influence recognition of specific liquids and inference of other physical properties.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]   HIGHLIGHTS AND THE PERCEPTION OF GLOSSINESS [J].
BECK, J ;
PRAZDNY, S .
PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 1981, 30 (04) :407-410
[2]   RECOGNITION-BY-COMPONENTS - A THEORY OF HUMAN IMAGE UNDERSTANDING [J].
BIEDERMAN, I .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1987, 94 (02) :115-147
[3]   The psychophysics toolbox [J].
Brainard, DH .
SPATIAL VISION, 1997, 10 (04) :433-436
[4]  
Burnham KP., 2002, Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information - Theoretic Approach, V2nd, P49, DOI DOI 10.1007/978-0-387-22456-5_2
[5]   The perception of gloss: A review [J].
Chadwick, A. C. ;
Kentridge, R. W. .
VISION RESEARCH, 2015, 109 :221-235
[6]   Effects of surface reflectance and 3D shape on perceived rotation axis [J].
Doerschner, Katja ;
Yilmaz, Ozgur ;
Kucukoglu, Gizem ;
Fleming, Roland W. .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2013, 13 (11)
[7]   Capture and synthesis of 3D surface texture [J].
Dong, JY ;
Chantler, M .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER VISION, 2005, 62 (1-2) :177-194
[8]   Effects of surface reflectance on local second order shape estimation in dynamic scenes [J].
Dovencioglu, Dicle N. ;
Wijntjes, Maarten W. A. ;
Ben-Shahar, Ohad ;
Doerschner, Katja .
VISION RESEARCH, 2015, 115 :218-230
[9]   Measuring perceived differences in surface texture due to changes in higher order statistics [J].
Emrith, K. ;
Chantler, M. J. ;
Green, P. R. ;
Maloney, L. T. ;
Clarke, A. D. F. .
JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA A-OPTICS IMAGE SCIENCE AND VISION, 2010, 27 (05) :1232-1244
[10]   Transparent layer constancy [J].
Faul, Franz ;
Ekroll, Vebjorn .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2012, 12 (12)