Perceiving Color
Color is perceptual experience evoked by wavelengths of light reaching the eyes
Color Vision
Ability to see difference between light and different wavelengths
Visible Spectrum
portion of electromagnetic spectrum in the range of 400-700 nm
Spectral Power Distribution (SPD)
Intensity (power) of a light at each wavelength in the visible spectrum
Heterochromatic Light
Light that consists of more than 1 wavelength
Monochromatic Light
Consists of only one wavelength
Achromatic Light (white light)
Light containing wavelengths from across visible spectrum with no really dominant wavelengths
Spectral Reflectance
Proportion of light that a surface reflects at each wavelength
Perceptual counterparts of color consist of three independent dimensions
Color Circle
2D depiction in which hue varies around circumference and saturation varies along any radius
Nonspectral Purples
Where red and blue ends of spectrum meet
Red Wavelength
650 nm
Yellow Wavelength
600 nm
Green Wavelength
550 nm
Cyan Wavelength
500 nm
Blue Wavelength
450 nm
Color Solid
3D depiction in which hue varies around circumference, saturation varies along any radius, and brightness varies vertically
Subtractive Color Mixture
Primaries for subtractive color mixing= red, yellow, and blue
Light reflected by mixture has certain wavelengths subtracted (absorbed) by each substance in mixture
Additive Color Mixture
Primaries for additive mixing= red, green, and blue
Compositions of mixture is result of adding together all wavelengths in all lights in mixture
Complementary Colors
Hues that are opposite each other on color wheel
Primary Color
Are any three color that can be combined in different proportions to produce a range of other colors
Trichromatic Color Representation
Light evokes different response from three different types of cone photoreceptors in retina
Opponent Color Representation
Responses from cones are combined and processed in subset of RGCs and by color-selective neurons in brain
Trichromatic color representation experiments
Use of metameric matching provided early evidence that there were three types of color receptors