Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byIsaac Hunter Modified over 9 years ago
1
Wavelength 1 produces a response of size X
2
Wavelength 2 produces a response of size X
3
The problem of “univariance”
4
So, we have a problem.
5
Here is a solution….add another cone type.
6
Two cones can give you color vision X/Y = red, X/Z = green COMPARISONS ARE CRITICAL
7
Three cones give you Trichromacy
8
Any light = aL + bM + cS
9
Let’s add some patches together
10
Let’s take GREEN
11
And add RED Red + Green = (M1+M2)/(L1+L2) = 1
12
Compare that to YELLOW Yellow = M3/L3 = 1
13
It follows that RED
14
RED plus GREEN
15
Yields Yellow R+G and Y are METAMERS This is ADDITIVE color mixture
16
But what about color paint in kindergarten? Blue paint Yellow paint
17
Mixing paint is SUBTRACTIVE The intersection of Blue paint and Yellow paint looks Green
18
Not all comparisons are used LWC - MWC gives you a red-green axis.
19
SWC - (LWC+MWC) gives you a blue-yellow axis.
20
Gray Everything is balanced
21
“unique” yellow
22
“unique” green
23
Purple… A “non-spectral” hue
24
Recall…Three cones give you Trichromacy Suppose: if S=M=L, then WHITE
25
Suppose that L gets tired? What does S=M>L look like?
26
Boring
27
Stare at the center
28
Boring?
29
Pretty boring……
30
Try this Negative afterimage
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.