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S&P what’s left?
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Viewing the World in Color!
Color solid wavelength (hue) amplitude (brightness) purity (saturation) 2 Mixtures: Subtractive Color Mixing – removing some wavelengths, leaving less light than was originally there. Additive Color Mixing – superimposing lights
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Color Theories Opponent Process Theory of Color Vision
Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision Human eye has 3 types of receptors sensitive to red, green, blue (primary colors). Color Blindness – inability to distinguish among colors. Dichromats – people who make do with only 2 types of receptors. Opponent Process Theory of Color Vision Color perception depends on receptors that make opposite responses to 3 pairs of colors. Red vs green, yellow vs blue, black vs white. Complementary Colors –produce gray tones when mixed. Afterimage – a visual image that persists after a stimulus is removed.
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Visual Cues Binocular cues - clues about distance based on differing views of the two eyes (3D movies) Retinal Disparity - objects within 25 feet project images to slightly different locations on the right & left retinas, so they see different views of the object. Convergence - Seeing the eyes converging toward one another as they focus on closer objects.
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Monocular Depth Cue-Clue about distance based on the image in either eye alone (Pictorial Cues)
Motion Parallax - we view objects that are closer to us as moving faster than objects that are further away from us Ex.
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Change Blindness a change in a visual stimulus is introduced and the observer does not notice it. Ex.
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Visual Cliff (1960s experiment)
Depth perception was considered innate and note learned behavior Ex.
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Perceptual Constancies in Vision
Perceptual Constancy – Tendency to experience a stable perception in the face of continually changing sensory input.
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Sound Conduction Deafness – Often explained by a lack of sound wave conduction related to the eardrum or ossicles. Sound Localization – a listener's ability to identify the location or origin of a detected sound in direction and distance. See image
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