FD
F. Di Cicco
11 records found
1
The Legacy of Willem Beurs
Bridging the Gap between Art and Material Perception
Dutch Golden Age painters could convincingly depict all sorts of materials. How did they do it and how do we perceive them as such, are questions that only recently have started to be addressed by art historians and vision scientists, respectively. This paper aims to discuss how
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A juicy orange makes for a tastier juice
The neglected role of visual material perception in packaging design
Food appearance sets intentions and expectations. When designing packaged food much attention is devoted to packaging elements like color and shape, but less to the characteristics of the images used. To our awareness, no study has yet investigated how the appearance of the food
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Convincing stuff
Disclosing perceptually-relevant cues for the depiction of materials in 17th century paintings
This thesis explores convincing stuff depicted in 17th century paintings, with the primary aim of understanding their visual perception. ”Stuff” is the term first introduced by Edward Adelson in 2001 to differentiate materials from objects, and to call attention on the research g
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Soft like velvet and shiny like satin
Perceptual material signatures of fabrics depicted in 17th century paintings
Dutch 17th century painters were masters in depicting materials and their properties in a convincing way. Here, we studied the perception of the material signatures and key image features of different depicted fabrics, like satin and velvet. We also tested whether the perception o
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If painters give you lemons, squeeze the knowledge out of them
A study on the visual perception of the translucent and juicy appearance of citrus fruits in paintings
Citrus fruits are characterized by a juicy and translucent interior, important properties that drive material recognition and food acceptance. Yet, a thorough understanding of their visual perception is still missing. Using citrus fruits depicted in 17th-century paintings as stim
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Material properties and image cues for convincing grapes
The know-how of the 17th-century pictorial recipe by Willem Beurs
Painters mastered replicating the regularities of the visual patterns that we use to infer different materials and their properties, via meticulous observation of the way light reveals the world's textures. The convincing depiction of bunches of grapes is particularly interesting
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Understanding gloss perception through the lens of art
Combining perception, image analysis, and painting recipes of 17th century painted grapes
To understand the key image features that we use to infer the glossiness of materials, we analyzed the pictorial shortcuts used by 17th century painters to imitate the optical phenomenon of specular reflections when depicting grapes. Gloss perception of painted grapes was determi
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To unveil the mystery of the exquisitely rendered materials in Dutch 17
th
century paintings, we
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Intensive observation of the world, and the intention of realistically transferring it to the canvas, allowed Dutch Golden Age painters to develop an implicit knowledge of the visual patterns people use to infer different materials, imitating key optical phenomena via shortcuts.
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