Chapter 5: Perceiving Colour Flashcards
Colour is a perceptual experience
Our experience of different wavelengths as being differently colours is a result of the interaction between receptors in the eyes and the wavelengths of light reflected from the surfaces of objects
Monochromatic
light consists of a single wavelength
Heterochromatic
light having a wide range of wavlengths
Achromatic
white light… means without, colourless
3 dimensions of colour
hue, saturation, brightness
Hue
- is a spectral colour (red, green) that has one wavelength
- Non-spectral is a combo of wavelengths (like pink and purple)
- the “colour” of the target
- wavelength
saturation
- richness of colour (dark blue, baby blue, light white-ish blue)
- the degree of whiteness in the target
- spectral purity
brightness
- grey levels
- the perceived intensity of the target
- luminance
Subtractive Mixing
- paints
- gets darker, loses more wavelengths
- the source produces a wide range of wavelengths, some of which are eliminated (absorbed)
Additive Mixing
- adding more wavelengths, gaining energy,
- gets whiter increase luminance
- TV, spotlights
- wavelengths from different sources are combined
- final result is lighter than the components (less saturated because we are reducing the purity of the light – adding broader range of wavelengths)
Blue/Yellow/Green paint with subtractive mixing
B: Absorbed (Y, O, R) Reflected (B, G)
Y: Absorbed (B, G) Reflected (Y, O, R)
G: Absorbed (B, Y, O, R) Reflected (G)
Two Stage Model
- Trichromatic Theory: 3 cones S(B) M(G) L(R)
- Opponency Theory: colour after effects, G+R and B+Y and W+B seem to go together this is the retnial ganglion cell
Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
- Proposed by Young and Helmholtz (1800s)
- Three different receptor mechanisms are responsible for color vision
- Behavioral evidence:
- Color-matching experiments Observers adjusted amounts of three wavelengths to match a comparison field to a test field
- later tested and found pigments that responded maximally to Short med and long wavelengths
Metameric Color Matching Experiment
Results showed that:
It is possible to perform the matching task
Stimuli are metamers (i.e., stimuli are physically different but are perceived as identical)
Observers with normal color vision need at least 3 wavelengths to make the matches
Observers with color deficiencies can match colors by using only 2 wavelengths
Principle of Univariance
- Each cone mechanism has only one dimension of response (i.e., firing rate or number of action potentials) and that reflects the amount of light absorbed by the cone
- As such is unable to distinguish changes in intensity of a light from changes in the spectral composition (i.e., wavelength)
- It is impossible to work backward from the response of a single cone to determine the wavelength of the light that caused the response
- The output of a photoreceptor is a product of the intensity of the light and the sensitivity of the receptor to that particular wavelength:
- Response = Stimulus Intensity * Relative Sensitivity to Wavelength