ScholarGate
Assistente

Visual Perception and Color

Visual perception and color science study how the human visual system senses light and color, and how graphics and imaging systems exploit that knowledge to produce convincing and efficient images.

Trova un argomento con PaperMindIn arrivoFind papers & topics
Tools & resources
Scarica le diapositive
Learn & explore
VideoIn arrivo

Definition

Visual perception and color is the study of how light and color are perceived by humans and of the perceptual models that guide the design of graphics, imaging, and display systems.

Scope

This area covers the physiology and psychophysics of human vision, the science of color measurement and appearance, the reproduction of high-dynamic-range scenes on limited displays through tone mapping, and computational models of where people look through visual saliency and attention.

Sub-topics

Core questions

  • How does the human visual system encode light, color, and contrast?
  • How is color measured and reproduced consistently across devices?
  • How are real-world brightness ranges mapped to displays?
  • What guides where people direct their gaze in a scene?

Key concepts

  • Human visual system
  • Trichromatic vision
  • Colorimetry and color spaces
  • Color appearance
  • Tone mapping
  • Visual saliency

Key theories

Trichromatic color vision
Human color perception arises from three cone types with overlapping spectral sensitivities, so any color can be matched by mixing three primaries, the basis of colorimetry and of all color displays.
Perceptual color appearance
Perceived color depends not only on a stimulus's spectrum but on surrounding context, adaptation, and viewing conditions, and color appearance models predict this to enable faithful cross-device reproduction.

Clinical relevance

Perceptual and color science guides display and camera design, color management in print and digital media, perceptually driven rendering and compression that allocate effort where the eye notices, and the evaluation of image quality.

History

From nineteenth-century trichromatic and opponent-process theories, vision science and colorimetry were formalized in the twentieth century with the CIE color system; perceptual insight increasingly shaped graphics through tone mapping, color management, and saliency from the 1990s onward.

Key figures

  • Brian Wandell
  • Mark Fairchild
  • Edwin Land

Related topics

Seminal works

  • wandell1995
  • fairchild2013

Frequently asked questions

Why do displays use red, green, and blue?
Human color vision relies on three cone types, so mixing three suitably chosen primaries can reproduce a wide range of perceived colors; red, green, and blue are a practical choice for that purpose.
Why does perception matter for computer graphics?
Images are ultimately judged by human eyes, so understanding the limits and biases of perception lets systems spend computation and bits where they are noticeable and approximate elsewhere, improving both quality and efficiency.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts