Chapter 9: Color Vision. Overview of Questions How do we perceive 200 different colors with only three cones? What does someone who is “color-blind” see?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7: Perceiving Color
Advertisements

Chapter 9: Perceiving Color
Sensation and Perception - color.ppt © 2001 Dr. Laura Snodgrass, Ph.D.1 Color Perception The Physical and Psychological variables Grassman’s Laws of color.
Color Vision. Wavelength properties: ● Hue: psychological reaction to different wavelengths of light. (Basically the same thing as color). ● Different.
Perception Chapter 7: Color Vision Color Vision: The reason why humans perceive different colors in the environment is because of the manner in which the.
Midterm 2 March 9 th and 10 th Review Session Monday 7pm in this room (probably)
Vision How does our body construct our conscious visual experience?
Color.
1 Computational Vision CSCI 363, Fall 2012 Lecture 33 Color.
Color Vision Our visual system interprets differences in the wavelength of light as color Rods are color blind, but with the cones we can see different.
Ch 71 Sensation & Perception Ch. 7: Perceiving Color © Takashi Yamauchi (Dept. of Psychology, Texas A&M University) Main topics Trichromatic theory Opponent.
Wavelength and Color Recall that light is electromagnetic radiation.
Read Land article for Thursday Test starts Wednesday of next week!!!!
Read article by Land for Thursday Article by Anne Treisman coming up in about two weeks.
Lecture 6: Color in Design Neil H. Schwartz, Ph.D. Senior Seminar in Visualization.
ARAVIND EYE CARE SYSTEM A R A V I N D E Y E H O S P I T A L & Postgraduate Institute of Ophthalmology Madurai, India ARAVIND EYE CARE SYSTEM A R A V I.
COLOR PERCEPTION Physical and Psychological Properties Theories – Trichromatic Theory – Opponent Process Theory Color Deficiencies Color and Lightness.
Chapter 7: Color Vision How do we perceive color?.
Seeing Color. Visual Spectrum Light varies in intensity and wavelength.
Color Vision: Sensing a Colorful World
THEORIES OF COLOR VISION
Colour Vision I The retinal basis of colour vision and the inherited colour vision deficiencies Prof. Kathy T. Mullen McGill Vision Research (H4.14) Dept.
PSYCH JOURNAL 9/24/2013 Vision is the most frequently studied sense. Why do you think this is the case? Why is vision so important? How would your life.
Module 12 Vision.  Transduction  conversion of one form of energy to another  in sensation, transforming of stimulus energies into neural impulses.
1 Perception and VR MONT 104S, Fall 2008 Lecture 7 Seeing Color.
PHYSIOLOGY OF COLOR VISION
The Visual System Dr. Kline FSU.
Perceiving and Recognizing Objects 4. Object Recognition Objects in the brain Extrastriate cortex: The region of cortex bordering the primary visual cortex.
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution Introductory Psychology Concepts Vision.
3.2 VISION 70% of your receptor cells are in your eyes taste and touch need direct contact where as sight and smell don’t Sight can be experienced from.
Chapter 7: Color perception Color is an important source of information independent of luminance (which we discussed extensively in Chapter 5). Color is.
The Visual System. The Nature of Light Electromagnetic Spectrum – An energy spectrum that includes X-rays, radar, and radio waves – A small portion of.
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY Module 14 Introduction to Sensation and Perception: Vision James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers.
Chapter 9: Perceiving Color. What Are Some Functions of Color Vision? Color signals help us classify and identify objects. Color facilitates perceptual.
Do Now Try to label the diagram of the eye Use your textbook and the terms on the right to help you Optic nerve Pupil Lens Retina Vitreous Iris Cornea.
The Eye contains visual sensory receptors focuses light on the retina
Importance of Color Painters first used charcoal Early artists used ochre to add red Colors are not always the same from culture to culture.
Read article by Land for Thursday Article by Anne Treisman coming up in about two weeks.
Sensation Vision The Eye Theories Hearing The Ear Theories Other Senses Smell Taste Pain Gestalt Principles Perceptual Constancies Perception Basic Principles.
Let’s Get Visual!. What We See p. 125 Hue Visual experience specified by color names and related to the wavelength of light. Intensity Influences brightness.
Vision Structure of the Eye We only use light energy to see.
Visual Information Processing October 30, Feature Detectors Certain cells in the visual cortex (occipital lobe) respond to specific features of.
Vision Module 13.
How do we see color? There is only one type of rod. It can only tell the intensity of the light, not its color. Because the cones can differentiate colors,
11 PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Worth Publishers, © 2007 PowerPoint Slides Worth Publishers, © 2007.
Chapter 7: Color perception
Mind, Brain & Behavior Wednesday February 19, 2003.
Opponent Processes Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) has cells that are maximally stimulated by spots of light Visual pathway stops in LGN on the way from.
DO NOW. VisionVision Our most dominating sense. Visual Capture.
Chapter 9: Perceiving Color. Overview of Questions Why do we perceive blue dots when a yellow flash bulb goes off? What does someone who is “color-blind”
Chapter 9: Perceiving Color. Figure 9-1 p200 Figure 9-2 p201.
1 Computational Vision CSCI 363, Fall 2012 Lecture 32 Biological Heading, Color.
Psychological dimensions:
Vision. The Eye and Vision It’s the most complex and most important sense for humans. The vision “system” transfers light waves into neural messages that.
Lecture 6 - Chapter 7 Colour Vision Stimulus (what is colour?)
Review: Vision.
Color Vision by King Saud University Physiology Dept
Chapter 5 Vision.
Vision Seeing is Believing.
Bell Work What occurs when experiences influence our interpretation of data? A. Selective attention B. Transduction C. Bottum-up processing D. Top-down.
Ch 6: The Visual System pt 3
Perceptual Constancies
Prof. Kathy T. Mullen McGill Vision Research (H4.14)
VISION Module 18.
Color.
Changing Light Waves to Neural Impulses
Vision. Vision Vision Our most dominating sense (Visual Capture). The eye is like a camera (it needs light).
Vision.
(Do Now) Journal What is psychophysics? How does it connect sensation with perception? What is an absolute threshold? What are some implications of Signal.
Fatima Balsharaf, Rahaf Alshammari
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9: Color Vision

Overview of Questions How do we perceive 200 different colors with only three cones? What does someone who is “color-blind” see? How does our memory of color affect our perception of color?

Fruit of a different color just doesn’t look right.

What Are Some Functions of Color Vision? Color signals help us classify and identify objects. Color facilitates perceptual organization of elements into objects. Color vision may provide an evolutionary advantage in foraging for food.

How Can We Describe Color Experience? Colors can be changed by: –Intensity which changes perceived brightness –Saturation - adding white to a color results in less saturated color

Chromatic Colors Basic colors are red, yellow, green, and blue Color circle shows perceptual relationship among colors Chromatic colors or hues - objects that preferentially reflect some wavelengths

Color wheel with exceptions Some colors not in the color spectrum. White Gray Black Brow Achromatic colors – contain no hues

What Is the Relationship Between Wavelength and Color Perception? Color perception is related to the wavelength of light:

Figure 9.4 The visual spectrum. 400 to 450nm appears violet 450 to 490nm appears blue 500 to 575nm appears green 575 to 590nm appears yellow 590 to 620nm appears orange 620 to 700nm appears red

Table 9.1 Relationship between predominant wavelengths reflected and color perceived

Colors of Objects Colors of objects are determined by the wavelengths that are reflected Reflectance curves - plots of percentage of light reflected for specific wavelengths –Called selective reflectance

Figure 9.5 Reflectance curves for surfaces that appear white, gray, and black, and for blue, green and yellow pigments. Adapted from Clulow, F. W. (1972). Color: Its principles and their applications. New York: Morgan and Morgan.

Selective transmission Selective transmission: –Transparent objects, such as liquids, selectively allow wavelengths to pass through –Cranberry juice –Transmits long wavelengths –Looks red

Additive: Mixing lights of different wavelengths All wavelengths are available for the observer to see Superimposing blue and yellow lights leads to white

Color Mixing Subtractive color mixture: –Mixing paints with different pigments –Additional pigments reflect fewer wavelengths –Mixing blue and yellow leads to green

Figure 9.7 Color mixing with paint. Mixing blue paint and yellow paint creates a paint that appears green. This is subtractive color mixture.

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 in a comparison field to match a test field of one wavelength.

Figure 9.8 In a color-matching experiment, the observer adjusts the amount of three wavelengths in one field (right) so it matches the color of the single wavelength in other field (left).

Color Matching Experiments Results showed that: –It is possible to perform the matching task –Observers with normal color vision need at least three wavelengths to make the matches. –Observers with color deficiencies can match colors by using only two wavelengths.

Physiological Evidence for the Trichromatic Theory Researchers measured absorption spectra of visual pigments in receptors (1960s). –They found pigments that responded maximally to: Short wavelengths (419nm) Medium wavelengths (551nm) Long wavelengths (558nm)

Figure 9.9 Absorption spectra of the three cone pigments.

Figure 9.10 Patterns of firing of the three types of cones to different colors. The size of the cone symbolizes the size of the receptor’s response.

Figure 9.14 (a) Ishihara plate for testing for color deficiency. A person with normal color vision sees a “74” when the plate is viewed under standardized illumination. (b) Ishihara plate as perceived by a person with a from of red-green color deficiency.

Color Deficiency Monochromat - person who needs only one wavelength to match any color Dichromat - person who needs only two wavelengths to match any color Anomalous trichromat - needs three wavelengths in different proportions than normal trichromat Unilateral dichromat - trichromatic vision in one eye and dichromatic in other

Color Experience for Monochromats Monochromats have: –A very rare hereditary condition –Only rods and no functioning cones –Ability to perceive only in white, gray, and black tones –True color-blindness –Poor visual acuity –Very sensitive eyes to bright light

Dichromacy moderately severe color vision defect in which one of the three basic color mechanisms is absent or not functioning. It is hereditary and, in the case of Protanopia or Deuteranopia, sex-linked, affecting predominantly males. Dichromacy occurs when one of the cone pigments is missing and color is reduced to two dimensions.

Protanopia (no red cone) Protanopia is a severe type of color vision deficiency caused by the complete absence of red retinal photoreceptors. It is a form of dichromatism in which red appears dark. It is hereditary, sex-linked, and present in 1% of males and.02% of females

Deuteranopia (no green cone) a color vision deficiency in which the green retinal photoreceptors are absent, moderately affecting red–green hue discrimination. It is likewise hereditary and sex-linked. Deuteranopia affects 1% of males and.01% of females

Dichromats Protanopia Deuteranopia Red-green deficiency

Tritanopia (no blue cone) Tritanopia is a very rare color vision disturbance in which there are only two cone pigments present and a total absence of blue retinal receptors. Not sex-linked. Tritanopia affects.002% of males and.001% of females Blue-yellow deficiency

Scenes with color deficiency

Afterimages Stare a box for 30 seconds

Afterimage a

Afterimages b

Opponent-Process Theory of Color Vision Proposed by Hering (1800s) –Color vision is caused by opposing responses generated by blue and yellow, and by green and red. Behavioral evidence: –Color afterimages and simultaneous color contrast show the opposing pairings –Types of color blindness are red/green and blue/yellow.

Color matrix for afterimage and simultaneous contrast demonstrations.

Results of afterimage and simultaneous contrast demonstration

Three pairs of connections Opponent-process mechanism –Three mechanisms - red/green, blue/yellow, and white/black –The pairs respond in an opposing fashion, such as positively to red and negatively to green –These responses were believed to be the result of chemical reactions in the retina.

Figure 9.19 The three opponent mechanisms proposed by Hering.

Physiology of Opponent-Process Researchers performing single-cell recordings found opponent neurons (1950s) –Opponent neurons: Are located in the retina and LGN Respond in an excitatory manner to one end of the spectrum and an inhibitory manner to the other

Trichromatic and Opponent-Process Theories Combined Each theory describes physiological mechanisms in the visual system –Trichromatic theory explains the responses of the cones in the retina –Opponent-process theory explains neural response for cells connected to the cones further in the brain

Figure 9.21 Our experience of color is shaped by physiological mechanisms, both in the receptors and in opponent neurons.

Figure 9.9 Absorption spectra of the three cone pigments.

Color Processing in the Cortex There is no single module for color perception –Cortical cells in V1, V2, and V4 respond to some wavelengths or have opponent responses –These cells usually also respond to forms and orientations