color part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

opponent proces theory

A

color perception is based on 4 primary colors
based on 3 opponent mechanisms
3D construct

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2
Q

what are the 3 opponents and why

A

red-green, blue-yellow, white-black

- impossible to have a color in between

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3
Q

complementary afterimages

A

when staring at one color too long eye wonders if calibration is off so shifts balance of scale and over-corrects so you see the opposite color

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4
Q

hue cancellation experiments

A

ex. how much yellow to cancel the blue

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5
Q

opponent cells

A
  • cells that are inhibitory to one color and excitatory to another
  • opposite responses
  • receptors wired together
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6
Q

how do the trichromatic and opponent process theories work together

A

at the level of cones: trichromatic theory responds (color matching)
the output of cones gets integrated: opponent process theory (hue cancellation)

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7
Q

what do these two theories not explain

A
  • why our eyes can be tricked when placing a solid bar in front of a gradient
  • determining if colors are the same or different
  • scintillating grid illusion
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8
Q

what does the light reflecitng off an object depend on (2)

A
  1. reflectance- how the object reflects light
  2. illumination- how light falls on the object
    light arriving at eye is a combination of light available, and how it reflects
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9
Q

lightness constancy

A

we tend to perceive whites, grays and blacks the same under varying illumination
- ratio principle: under even illumination, the ratio of reflected light guides perception of lightness

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10
Q

illumination edges

A

same surface, different illumination

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11
Q

reflectance edges

A

different surface, same illumination

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12
Q

color constancy

A

we tend to perceive objects with the same reflectance as having the same color under varying illumination

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13
Q

chromatic adaptation

A
  • if light arriving at eye is red, and light shining on paper is red, brain adapts and recognizes that the paper is still green
  • if light arriving at eye is white, and red on paper, brain will perceive the paper as red (trick the eye)
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14
Q

chromatic adaptation (environment example)

A

lush environment- tones down greeness so other aspects stand out and you can distinguish between greens
arid (little green)- cranks up green to help distinguish

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15
Q

factors that influence color constancy

A

chromatic adaptation- receptors for a color adapt over continuous stimulation
context- infer wavelength of illumination
memory- knowledge of things in the world effects how we perceive them

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