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Lecture 7 - Colour Vision

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metameric match and the principle of univariance. the problems with one- and two-pigment systems ... colour experience determined by relative activity of 3 cone ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 7 - Colour Vision


1
Lecture 7 - Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

2
Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

3
Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Newtons prism experiments
  • white light composed of all frequencies
  • spectral reflectance function
  • refraction, absorption reflection
  • colour mixing
  • subtractive (pigments filters)
  • additive (projection)

4
Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

5
Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • complementary colours
  • Hering's hue circle
  • 4 unitary hues
  • 2 achromatic colours
  • colour measurement standards
  • CIE chromaticity diagram

6
Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

7
Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • spectral reflectance function
  • colour constancy
  • retinal distribution of cones
  • resolution limit
  • additive colour mixing
  • e.g. pointillist paintings (Suerat), colour TV

8
Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

9
Trichromatic Theory
  • spectral sensitivity curve
  • 3 types of cones
  • metameric match and the principle of univariance
  • the problems with one- and two-pigment systems
  • colour experience determined by relative activity
    of 3 cone types

10
Key Point
  • variation in wavelength will not, by itself, lead
    to a perception of change in colour
  • i.e. 1-pigment system will only see differences
    in brightness
  • need at least 2 systems to signal change in ratio
    of responses
  • (remember everything is signaled by neural
    responses)

11
Key Point
  • colour is simply the name we give to the
    subjective experience that corresponds to our
    ability to distinguish between different
    wavelengths of light
  • it depends entirely on the eye that is looking

12
Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

13
Opponent Process Theory
  • pairs of colours, opposing each other
  • 3 fundamental colour processes
  • one achromatic B W
  • two chromatic R-G, B-Y
  • evidence for opponent processes
  • perceptual impossibilities
  • colour contrast
  • afterimages
  • LGN cell responses

14
Colour Vision
  • Physical Basis for Colour Perception
  • Individual Differences in Colour Perception
  • Physiological Basis for Colour Perception
  • Trichromatic Theory
  • Opponent Process Theory
  • Colour Deficiencies

15
Colour Deficiencies
  • dichromacies
  • protonopia - missing L type
  • deuteranopia - missing M type
  • tritanopia - missing S type
  • equiluminant chromatic stimuli
  • Ishihara plates
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