Chromatic adaptation is a study of change in the photoreceptivesensitivity of the human visual system (HVS) under various viewing conditions, such as illumination. Generally, the chromatic adaptation mechanism has the effect of discounting the illuminant, andthus metameric colors under one illuminant often appear metamericunder another illuminant. In particular, a piece of white paper is believed to appear white regardless of the illuminant. A human visionis said to have a color constancy property if a color of an objectappears invariant to the illuminant.The von Kries coefficient law is a theory that describes the relationship between the illuminant and the HVS sensitivity [7] and itaccounts for the approximate color constancy in the HVS [15] [11].However, Hess, Pretori, and Wallach demonstrate that the coefficient law is false under the context of chromatic adaptation [5] [8][9]. Instead, Hurvich and Jameson suggest that the surround activity induces an opposite physiological response through incrementalprocesses