Japanese researchers showed monkeys a number of images representing  various glosses and then they measured the responses of 39 neurons by  using microelectrodes. They found that a specific population of neurons  changed the intensities of the responses linearly according to either  the contrast-of-highlight, sharpness-of-highlight, or brightness of the  object. This shows that these 3 perceptual parameters are used as  parameters when the brain recognizes a variety of glosses. They also  found that different parameters are represented by different populations  of neurons. This was published in the Journal of Neuroscience (September 4, 2014 issue).
 The  gloss of an object surface provides information about the condition of  that object. For instance, whether it is wet or dry, whether food is  fresh or old. Several gloss-related physical parameters such as specular  reflectance and diffuse reflectance have been described and used in  computer graphics so far. However, the parameters used when neurons  respond to gloss have not yet been found.
A Japanese research group led by Hidehiko Komatsu, professor of the National Institute for Physiological Sciences (NIPS), National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS), in collaboration with the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR) prepared 16 images representing various glosses and showed them to monkeys. In a circumscribed area in the inferior temporal cortex of the brain, neurons strengthened their responses proportionately as the contrast-of-highlight and/or sharpness-of-highlight got higher. Neural responses also vary greatly depending on the brightness, for instance, whether the object is black, gray, or white. Furthermore, the perceptual gloss parameters of the presented image could be fairly precisely predicted from the strengths of the population neural responses.
By the application of these findings in an artificial image recognition system, the researchers are expecting that it would be able to develop robots that recognize gloss like humans.











