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Exam next week Covers everything about all sensory modalities except hearing This includes: vision balance/touch/taste/smell/ proprioception/theroception
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COLOR VISION
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Color Vision Perceiving Color Primary colors Red Green Blue
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Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
Signal to Brain Wavelength Input Cone “Blue” Blue “Green” “Red”
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Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
Signal to Brain Wavelength Input Cone “Blue” “Green” Green “Red”
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Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
Signal to Brain Wavelength Input Cone “Blue” “Green” “Red” Red
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Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
Signal to Brain Wavelength Input Cone “Blue” Equal Parts Red and Green = “Green” Yellow “Red”
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Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
Signal to Brain Wavelength Input Cone “Blue” Equal Parts Red and Green = “Green” Yellow “Red”
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Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision
Signal to Brain Wavelength Input Cone “Blue” Equal Parts Red and Green = “Green” Yellow “Red”
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Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory
Problem with Trichromatic Theory: YELLOW
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Theories of Color Vision: Opponent-Process Theory
color is determined by outputs of two different continuously variable channels: red - green opponent channel blue - yellow opponent channel
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Theories of Color Vision: Opponent-Process Theory
Red opposes Green (Red + Green) opposes Blue Opponent-Process Theory explains color afterimages because the “opposite” of blue is yellow, the “opposite” of green is red, etc.
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Color is an illusion Everything you’ve learned so far is wrong.
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Color is an illusion Everything you’ve learned so far is wrong.
Well, not really wrong, just far from complete.
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Everthing you thought you knew
L A N D Everthing you thought you knew about color is wrong...
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What Newton Found (and everyone believed)
White light can be split into all wavelengths by a prism According to previous theories: two wavelengths combine to yield intermediate color and no others Red Light Green Light Red + Green = YELLOW
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What Newton Found (and everyone believed)
White light can be split into all wavelengths by a prism According to previous theories: two wavelengths combine to yield intermediate color and no others Red + Green light can never yield blue Blue + Green light can never yield red
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What twist did Land do to this paradigm that confounds the conventional understanding of color mixing?
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What Land found: Two bands (colors) of the spectrum recombine to produce all the possible colors provided the appropriate relative amount of each wavelength is projected Red Light Green Light transparency slides
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How did Land project the “appropriate” ratio of wavelengths?
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Short- and Long- “record”
Camera Capture two grey-scale images of the scene using filters that allow only the wavelengths you will project “Long” filter Object “short” filter film Projector Image “Long” filter “short” filter
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Camera splits image into
maps of “longer” and “shorter” wavelengths long filter medium filter
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Projector combines “longer” and “shorter” wavelengths
using the maps to get the appropriate amounts of each long/“red” light medium/ “green” light Viewer perceives desaturated hues including blues
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What is Land’s interpretation? How do we perceive color?
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Land’s interpretation:
perception of color is a weighing of the ratio of shorter and longer wavelengths
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Land’s interpretation:
perception of color is a weighing of the ratio of shorter and longer wavelengths
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Why would the visual system have evolved this way?
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Why would the visual system have evolved this way?
Hint: “Within broad limits, the actual values of the wavelengths make no difference, nor does the over-all available brightness of each”
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What is color for? What is color vision used for? Identification - what is this thing? Discrimination - what other things is this thing like? Communication - indicates this thing to others But in each case color refers not to the illuminating light, but to the surface of the object itself
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What is color for? Does the color of an object remain constant under different lighting conditions?
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Color Constancy The “color” of objects is independent of the ambient light – even though light can vary dramatically Sunlight Incandescent Light Relative Intensity Relative Intensity Wavelength
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Color Constancy Because of our mechanism of color constancy we can even use completely artificial spectra
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Color Constancy The “color” of objects is independent of the ambient light
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Next Time ATTENTION!
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