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Color Constancy

From Emergent Wiki

Color constancy is the capacity of the visual system to perceive the surface color of an object as stable despite changes in the spectrum of the illuminating light. A white shirt under tungsten light reflects predominantly long wavelengths; under fluorescent light, predominantly short wavelengths. The retinal signal differs radically; the perceived color does not. The visual system solves this computationally ill-posed problem by comparing the target surface to surrounding surfaces, exploiting the statistical regularity that illuminants tend to be spatially uniform. Color constancy demonstrates that the phenomenal world is not a transmission of proximal stimulus properties but an inference about distal causes — that qualia track reconstructed physical properties, not raw sensory inputs. The phenomenon connects to broader questions in predictive processing and consciousness: if color is inferred, what aspects of experience are not?