2015 journal article

Does hue affect the perception of grayness?

COLOR RESEARCH AND APPLICATION, 40(4), 374–382.

By: R. Shamey n, W. Sawatwarakul n & S. Fu n

co-author countries: United States of America 🇺🇸
author keywords: perceived grayness; visual assessment; gray; achromatic scale; hue angle
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

Abstract Although gray is defined as an achromatic color sensation varying only in lightness, in practice, grayness can be tinged by any hue within a limited range of chroma. Given the fact that preferred perceived white and black are slightly chromatic, the hypothesis tested in this study is that the preferred perceived object gray is also slightly chromatic. Two psychophysical experiments were carried out to test this hypothesis. A total of 56 color normal subjects assessed 27 different gray patches that varied mainly in hue, in three separate trials. Subjects selected a subset of samples (10 in the first experiment and five in the second experiment) that were considered “most gray” resulting in 168 selected sets of samples. Subjects then ranked their selected subset of samples from most to least gray. A total of 1225 assessments were thus obtained (750 assessments in the first experiment and 465 in the second experiment). Results from both experiments were in good agreement and indicate that greenish blue grays in the range of 190° to 235° of CIELAB hue angle were selected as most gray, thus indicating that the perception of grayness is influenced by hue. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Col Res Appl, 40, 374–382, 2015