Is Machine Colour Constancy Good Enough?

Abstract

This paper presents a negative result: current machine colour constancy algorithms are not good enough for colour-based object recognition. This result has surprised us since we have previously used the better of these algorithms successfully to correct the colour balance of images for display. Colour balancing has been the typical application of colour constancy, rarely has it been actually put to use in a computer vision system, so our goal was to show how well the various methods would do on an obvious machine colour vision task, namely, object recognition. Although all the colour constancy methods we tested proved insufficient for the task, we consider this an important finding in itself. In addition we present results showing the correlation between colour constancy performance and object recognition performance, and as one might expect, the better the colour constancy the better the recognition rate.

Cite

Text

Funt et al. "Is Machine Colour Constancy Good Enough?." European Conference on Computer Vision, 1998. doi:10.1007/BFB0055683

Markdown

[Funt et al. "Is Machine Colour Constancy Good Enough?." European Conference on Computer Vision, 1998.](https://mlanthology.org/eccv/1998/funt1998eccv-machine/) doi:10.1007/BFB0055683

BibTeX

@inproceedings{funt1998eccv-machine,
  title     = {{Is Machine Colour Constancy Good Enough?}},
  author    = {Funt, Brian V. and Barnard, Kobus and Martin, Lindsay},
  booktitle = {European Conference on Computer Vision},
  year      = {1998},
  pages     = {445-459},
  doi       = {10.1007/BFB0055683},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/eccv/1998/funt1998eccv-machine/}
}