McCollough Effect Tests & Experiments
McCollough Effect Background Information
(click to enlarge) A test image for the McCollough effect. On first
looking at this image, the vertical and horizontal lines should look
black and white, colourless. After induction (see images below), the
horizontal lines should look greenish and the vertical lines should
look pinkish.
One induction image for the McCollough effect. Stare at the centre of
this image for a few seconds, then at the centre of the second image
below for a few seconds. Then return to this image. Keep looking
between the two coloured images for several minutes.
A second induction image for the McCollough effect. Stare at the centre
of this image for a few seconds, then at the centre of the image above
for a few seconds. Then return to this image. Keep looking between the
two coloured images for several minutes.
The McCollough effect is a phenomenon of human visual perception in which colorless gratings appear colored depending on (contingent on) the orientation of the gratings. It is an aftereffect requiring a period of induction
to produce it. For example, if someone alternately looks at a red
horizontal grating and a green vertical grating for a few minutes, a
black-and-white horizontal grating will then look greenish and a
black-and-white vertical grating will then look pinkish. The effect was
discovered by Celeste McCollough in 1965.
How to obtain the effect
To obtain the effect, first look at a test image similar to that at top right. It should contain oppositely oriented gratings of lines, such as horizontal and vertical as shown here. Next, stare alternately at two induction
images similar to the ones directly beneath the top image. One image
should show one orientation of grating (here horizontal) with a
coloured background (red) and the other should show the other
orientation of grating (here vertical) with a different, preferably oppositely coloured
background (green). Each image should be gazed at for several seconds
at a time, and the two images should be gazed at for a total of several
minutes
for the effect to become visible. Stare approximately at the centre of
each image, allowing the eyes to move around a little. After several
minutes, look back to the test image; the gratings should appear tinted
by the opposite colour to that of the induction gratings (i.e.,
horizontal should appear greenish and vertical pinkish).
Properties of the effect
The McCollough effect is remarkable because it is very long lasting
(e.g., Jones & Holding, 1975, found that 10 minutes of induction
can lead to the effect lasting 24 hours), because it depends on retinal
orientation (tilting the head by 45 degrees makes the colors in the
above example disappear; tilting the head by 90 degrees makes the
colors reappear such that the gravitationally vertical grating now
looks green), and because inducing the effect with one eye leads to no
effect being seen with the other eye (but see White, Petry, Riggs,
& Miller, 1978, for some evidence of binocular interactions). The
effect is different from colored afterimages, which appear superimposed on whatever is seen and which are quite brief.
Any aftereffect requires a period of induction (or adaptation) with an induction stimulus (or, in the case of the McCollough effect, induction stimuli). It then requires a test stimulus
on which the aftereffect can be seen. In the McCollough effect as
described above, the induction stimuli are the red horizontal grating
and the green vertical grating. A typical test stimulus might show
adjacent patches of black-and-white vertical and horizontal gratings
(as above). The McCollough-effect colours are less saturated than the induction colours.
The induction stimuli can have any different colors. The effect is strongest, however, when the colors are complementary,
such as red and green, and blue and orange. A related version of the
McCollough effect also occurs with a single color and orientation. For
example, induction with only a red horizontal grating makes a
black-and-white horizontal test grating appear greenish whereas a
black-and-white vertical test grating appears colourless (although
there is some argument about that). Stromeyer (1978) called these non-redundant
effects. According to him, the classic effect with induction from two
different orientations and colours simply makes the illusory colors
more noticeable via contrast.
The effect is specific to the region of the retina that is exposed
to the induction stimuli. This has been shown by inducing opposite
effects in adjacent regions of the retina (i.e., from one region of the
retina verticals appear pink and horizontals appear greenish; from an
adjacent region of the retina, verticals appear greenish and
horizontals appear pink). Nevertheless, if a small region of the retina
is exposed to the induction stimuli, and the test contors run through
this region, the effect spreads along those test contours. Of course,
if the induced area is in the fovea
(central vision) and the eyes are allowed to move, then the effect will
appear everywhere in the visual scene visited by the fovea.
The effect is also optimal when the thickness of the bars in the
induction stimulus matches that of those in the test stimulus (i.e, the
effect is tuned, albeit broadly, to spatial frequency). This property led to non-redundant effects being reported by people who had used computer monitors with uniformly colored phosphors to do word processing.
These monitors were popular in the 1980s, and commonly showed text as
green on black. People noticed later when reading text of the same
spatial frequency, in a book say, that it looked pink. Also a
horizontal grating of the same spatial frequency as the horizontal
lines of the induction text (such as the horizontal stripes on the
letters "IBM" on the envelope for early floppy disks) looked pink.
Explanations of the effect
McCollough's paper sparked hundreds of scientific papers on the
effect (e.g., see reviews by Stromeyer, 1978, and by McCollough, 2000).
The effect has been variously attributed to adaptation of cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus designed to correct for chromatic aberration of the eye, to adaptation of cells in the visual cortex
jointly responsive to color and orientation (this was McCollough's
explanation), to processing within higher centres of the brain
(including the frontal lobes as held by Barnes et al., 1999), and to learning and memory.
In 2006, the explanation of the effect was still the subject of debate,
although there was a consensus in favour of McCollough's original
explanation.
References
- Barnes, J., Howard, R. J., Senior, C., Brammer, M., Bullmore, E.
T., Simmons, A., et al. (1999). Brain imaging: The functional anatomy
of the McCollough contingent color after-effect. NeuroReport, 10,
195–199.
- Jones, P. D., & Holding, D. H. (1975). Extremely long-term
persistence of the McCollough effect. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Human Perception & Performance, 1, 323–327.
- McCollough, C. (1965). Adaptation of edge-detectors in the human visual system. Science, 149, 1115–1116.
- McCollough, C. (2000). Do McCollough effects provide evidence for
global pattern processing? Perception & Psychophysics, 62, 350–362.
- Stromeyer, C. F. (1978). Color aftereffects dependent on form. In
R. Held, H. W. Leibowitz, & H. L. Teuber (Eds.), Handbook of
Sensory Physiology: Perception. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
- White, K. D., Petry, H. M., Riggs, L. A., & Miller, J. (1978).
Binocular interactions during establishment of McCollough effects.
Vision Research, 18, 1201–12150.
See also
External links
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