Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Midterm 2 March 9 th and 10 th Review Session Monday 7pm in this room (probably)
3
What Newton Found (and everyone believed) White light can be split into all wavelengths by a prism
4
Color Vision Theories of Color Vision “Blue” “Green” “Red” Blue Wavelength InputCone Signal to Brain
5
Color Vision Theories of Color Vision “Blue” “Green” “Red” Green Wavelength InputCone Signal to Brain
6
Color Vision Theories of Color Vision “Blue” “Green” “Red” Red Wavelength InputCone Signal to Brain
7
Color Vision Theories of Color Vision “Blue” “Green” “Red” Yellow Equal Parts Red and Green = Wavelength InputCone Signal to Brain
8
Color Vision Theories of Color Vision “Blue” “Green” “Red” Yellow Equal Parts Red and Green = Wavelength InputCone Signal to Brain
9
Color Vision Theories of Color Vision “Blue” “Green” “Red” Yellow Equal Parts Red and Green = Wavelength InputCone Signal to Brain
10
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
11
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
12
What twist did Land do to this paradigm that confounds the conventional understanding of color mixing?
13
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 transparency slides Red Light Green Light
14
How did Land project the “appropriate” ratio of wavelengths?
15
Short- and Long- “record” Capture two grey- scale images of the scene using filters that allow only the wavelengths you will project Camera “short” filter “Long” filter film Projector Object Image “Long” filter “short” filter
16
medium filter long filter Camera splits image into maps of “longer” and “shorter” wavelengths
17
medium/ “green” light long/“red” light Projector combines “longer” and “shorter” wavelengths using the maps to get the appropriate amounts of each Viewer perceives desaturated hues including blues
18
What is Land’s interpretation? How do we perceive color?
19
Land’s interpretation: perception of color is a weighing of the ratio of shorter and longer wavelengths
20
Land’s interpretation: perception of color is a weighing of the ratio of shorter and longer wavelengths
21
Why would the visual system have evolved this way?
22
Hint: “Within broad limits, the actual values of the wavelengths make no difference, nor does the over-all available brightness of each”
23
What is color for? What is color vision used for?
24
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
25
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
26
What is color for? Does the color of an object remain constant under different lighting conditions?
27
Color Constancy The “color” of objects is independent of the ambient light – even though light can vary dramatically Relative Intensity Wavelength Relative Intensity SunlightIncandescent Light
28
Color Constancy Because of our mechanism of color constancy we can even use completely artificial spectra
29
Color Constancy The “color” of objects is independent of the ambient light
30
Next Time ATTENTION!
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.