Fig. 1. Experimental design. A, In brightness discrimination, an animal fixated a central point and then saccaded to the brighter of two 1° radius disks centered at 3° eccentricity to each side of fixation. B, In both discrimination and induction experiments, animals fixated for 1 sec, two stimuli were presented, and, after a variable delay of 1.2–1.8 sec, the fixation point was extinguished, cueing the animal to saccade to the brighter target. C, The brightness induction task was identical to brightness discrimination, except that the two disks were surrounded by 1° thick annuli. The test disk had a luminance of either 12.6 or 32.2 cd/m2, and the test surround was given six to seven different luminances. The comparison disk took on a range of luminances, and the comparison surround was fixed at 1.3 cd/m2. D, To study White's effect, two square-wave luminance gratings were placed side-by-side. The black and white stripes had luminances of 0.2 and 81 cd/m2, respectively. A 1° × 2° gray patch was superimposed on a black stripe on one of the gratings and a white stripe on the other. The patch on the black stripe (white–gray–white or WGW stimulus) had a luminance of 14.1 or 31.3 cd/m2, and the luminance of the patch on the white stripe (black–gray–black or BGB stimulus) was variable. The animal saccaded to the patch that appeared brighter. E, In the White's effect experiment, animals were allowed to freely view both stimuli. After 2–3 sec of free viewing, a fixation point appeared, and the animals had to fixate this (1.8° diameter window) for a variable interval of 1.2–1.8 sec. The animals saccaded to the brighter of the two gray patches when the fixation point was extinguished.