The Impact of Background Luminance on the Perception of Chromatic Lightness

Andrea Avendano Martinez, Jake Zueina, Jaclyn Pytlarz

Background luminance drastically affects the color appearance of content. Modern display technologies allow for the reproduction of highly saturated colors, whose perceived lightness tends to look ‘dull’ or muted when superimposed on backgrounds of higher luminance values. These perceptual effects can be predicted by analyzing the relationship between a color's chromatic contribution to perceived lightness and how it changes with background luminance. A two-alternative-forced-choice psychophysical lightness-matching experiment was conducted across different levels of background luminance. The Helmholtz-Kohlrausch (H-K) effect was found to have a significant impact on observers’ expectations when assessing the lightness of a chromatic color under changing background luminance levels. The experimental results show that as background luminance is increased for highly saturated, low luminance colors, current models overestimate perceived lightness changes by more than double. To perceptually maintain the intent of creative content, there is a need for color appearance models to accurately predict chromatic lightness under changes to the background luminance level.

Published
2023-10
Content type
Original Research
Keywords
Color appearance, background, brightness, colorfulness, psychophysical experiment, image processing, Helmholtz-Kohlrausch, lightness
DOI
10.5594/M002008
ISBN
978-1-61482-964-5