EXAM 2 !!!

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EXAM 2 !!! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday of NEXT WEEK

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EXAM 2 !!!. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday of NEXT WEEK. EXAM 2 !!!. Will cover everything from: taste/touch/smell/balance To Colour Vision (Thursday this week). COLOR VISION. Color is an illusion. What color is this box?. Wavelength and Color. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of EXAM 2 !!!

Page 1: EXAM 2 !!!

EXAM 2 !!!

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday of NEXT WEEK

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EXAM 2 !!!

Will cover everything from:

taste/touch/smell/balanceTo

Colour Vision (Thursday this week)

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• What color is this box?

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Wavelength and Color• Recall that light is electromagnetic radiation

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Wavelength and Color• Recall that light is electromagnetic

radiation• Light waves have a

frequency/wavelength

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Wavelength and Color• Recall that light is electromagnetic

radiation• Light waves have a

frequency/wavelength• Frequency/wavelength is the physical

property that corresponds (loosely) to the perception called color

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Color Vision• Different wavelengths correspond

roughly to the “colors” of the spectrum

Wavelength and Color

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Color Vision• White light is a mixture of wavelengths

– prisms decompose white light into assorted wavelengths

Wavelength and Color

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Color Vision• Primary colors

Perceiving Color

What are the primary colors?

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Color Vision• Primary colors

Perceiving Color

Red Green Blue

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Color Vision• Primary colors

Perceiving Color

What makes them primary?

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Color Vision• Primary colors

• Every color (hue) can be created by blending light of the three primary colors in differing proportions

Perceiving Color

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Color Vision• Primary colors

• Every color (hue) can be created by blending light of the three primary colors in differing proportions

• Led to prediction that there must be three (and only three) distinct color receptor types

Perceiving Color

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Color VisionTrichromatic Theory of Color Vision

“Blue”

“Green”

“Red”

Blue

Wavelength Input Cone Signal to Brain

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Color VisionTrichromatic Theory of Color Vision

“Blue”

“Green”

“Red”

Green

Wavelength Input Cone Signal to Brain

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Color VisionTrichromatic Theory of Color Vision

“Blue”

“Green”

“Red” Red

Wavelength Input Cone Signal to Brain

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Color VisionTrichromatic Theory of Color Vision

“Blue”

“Green”

“Red”

Yellow

Equal Parts Red and Green =

Wavelength Input Cone Signal to Brain

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Color VisionTrichromatic Theory of Color Vision

“Blue”

“Green”

“Red”

Yellow

Equal Parts Red and Green =

Wavelength Input Cone Signal to Brain

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Color VisionTrichromatic Theory of Color Vision

“Blue”

“Green”

“Red”

Yellow

Equal Parts Red and Green =

Wavelength Input Cone Signal to Brain

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Color Vision• Trichromatic theory of color vision:

– brain interprets the relative amounts of signaling from each of these cone types

Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory

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Color Vision• Trichromatic theory of color vision:

– brain interprets the relative amounts of signaling from each of these cone types

• This means that some colors can be matched by a pair of wavelengths– metamers: colors that have no definite single

wavelength (e.g. yellow)

Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory

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Color Vision• Trichromatic theory of color vision:

– brain interprets the relative amounts of signaling from each of these cone types

• This means that some colors can be matched by a pair of wavelengths– metamers: colors that have no definite single

wavelength (e.g. yellow)• This also means that any color can be

matched by mixing (not more than) three different wavelengths

Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory

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• What color can only exist as a metamer (an additive mixture of wavelengths)? In other words, what color cannot be made with a single wavelength?

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• What color can only exist as a metamer (an additive mixture of wavelengths)? In other words, what color cannot be made with a single wavelength?

MagentaThink about why!

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• Subtractive mixing is different!• Subtractive mixing is commonly used in color printers

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• Subtractive mixing is different!• Subtractive mixing is commonly used in color printers

• In subtractive mixing, pigments are used to REMOVE wavelengths

• The resulting colour is a mixture whatever wavelengths don’t get absorbed by the pigment

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• Problem with Trichromatic Theory:

Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory

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• Problem with Trichromatic Theory:

YELLOW

Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory

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• Problem with Trichromatic Theory:– most people categorize colors into four primaries:

red, yellow, green, and blue

– some colors simply cannot be perceived as gradations of each other• redish green !?• blueish yellow !?

– It is as if these colors are opposites

Theories of Color Vision: Trichromatic Theory

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• Opponent-Process Theory– color is determined by outputs of two

different continuously variable channels:• red - green opponent channel• blue - yellow opponent channel• “yellow” = red + green

• Your visual system balances input to either end of each channel

Theories of Color Vision: Opponent-Process Theory

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• Everything you’ve learned so far is wrong.

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• Everything you’ve learned so far is wrong.

• Well, not really wrong, just far from complete.

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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 LightGreen 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 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 LightGreen Light

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How did Land project the “appropriate” ratio of

wavelengths?

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medium/“green” light

long/“red”light

Projector combines “longer” and “shorter” wavelengths using the maps to get the appropriate amounts of each

Viewer perceivesdesaturated huesincluding blues

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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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Color Constancy• The “color” of objects is independent of the ambient

light – even though light can vary dramatically

Rel

ativ

e In

tens

ity

Wavelength

Rel

ativ

e In

tens

itySunlight Incandescent Light

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Color Constancy• Because of our

mechanism of color constancy we can even use completely artificial spectra

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Next Time

• ATTENTION!