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The watercolor effect (WCE) is a striking visual illusion elicited by a bichromatic double contour, such as a light orange and a dark purple, hugging each other on a white background. Color assimilation, emanating from the lighter contour, spreads onto the enclosed surface area, thereby tinting it with a chromatic veil, not unlike a weak but real color. Map makers in the 17th century utilized the WCE to better demarcate the shape of adjoining states, while 20th-century artist Bridget Riley created illusory watercolor as part of her op-art. Today's visual scientists study the WCE for its filling-in properties and strong figure–ground segregation. This review emphasizes the superior strength of the WCE for grouping and figure–ground organization vis-à-vis the classical Gestalt factors of Max Wertheimer (1923), thereby inspiring a notion of form from induced color. It also demonstrates that a thin chromatic line, flanking the inside of a black Mondrian-type pattern, induces the WCE across a large white surface area. Phenomenological, psychophysical, and neurophysiological approaches are reviewed.
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Lothar Spillmann
Journal of Vision
University of Freiburg
University Medical Center Freiburg
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Lothar Spillmann (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6380ab6db6435875ca327 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1167/jov.24.6.15