Escher in color space: Individual-differences multidimensional scaling of color dissimilarities collected with a gestalt formation task

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Abstract

The structure of color perception can be examined by collecting judgments about color dissimilarities. In the procedure used here, stimuli are presented three at a time on a computer monitor and the spontaneous grouping of most-similar stimuli into gestalts provides the dissimilarity comparisons. Analysis with multidimensional scaling allows such judgments to be pooled from a number of observers without obscuring the variations among them. The anomalous perceptions of color-deficient observers produce comparisons that are represented well by a geometric model of compressed individual color spaces, with different forms of deficiency distinguished by different directions of compression. The geometrical model is also capable of accommodating the normal spectrum of variation, so that there is greater variation in compression parameters between tests on normal subjects than in those between repeated tests on individual subjects. The method is sufficiently sensitive and the variations sufficiently large that they are not obscured by the use of a range of monitors, even under somewhat loosely controlled conditions.

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Bimler, D., Kirkland, J., & Pichler, S. (2004). Escher in color space: Individual-differences multidimensional scaling of color dissimilarities collected with a gestalt formation task. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, and Computers, 36(1), 69–76. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03195550

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