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Effects of visual diet on colour discrimination and preference

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posted on 2024-10-08, 11:49 authored by Alice Skelton, John MauleJohn Maule, Simeon Floyd, Beata Wozniak, Asifa Majod, Jenny Bosten, Anna Franklin
To what extent is perception shaped by low-level statistical regularities of our visual environments, and on what time scales? We characterised the chromatic ‘visual diets’ of people living in remote rainforest and urban environments, using calibrated head-mounted cameras worn by participants as they went about their daily lives. All environments had chromatic distributions with most variance along a blue-yellow axis, but the extent of this bias differed across locations. If colour perception is calibrated to the visual environments in which participants are immersed, variation in the extent of the bias in scene statistics should have a corresponding impact on perceptual judgements. To test this, we measured colour discrimination and preferences for distributions of colour for people living in different environments. Group differences in the extent of blue-yellow bias in colour discrimination were consistent with perceptual learning in local environments. Preferences for colour distributions aligned with scene statistics, but not specifically to local environments, and one group preferred distributions along an unnatural colour axis orthogonal to that dominant in natural scenes. Our study shows the benefits of conducting psychophysics with people at remote locations for understanding the commonalities and diversity in human perception.

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  • Published

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  • Published version

Journal

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

ISSN

1471-2954

Publisher

The Royal Society

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  • Psychology Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

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  • Yes

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  • Yes

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