1 / 25

SI23 Introduction to Computer Graphics

SI23 Introduction to Computer Graphics. Lecture 3 – Colour Vision. Light and the Spectrum. Light is the visible form of electromagnetic energy. 10 -6. 10 -3. 10 -1. 10. 10 3. 10 6. 10 9. 10 12 (nm). Cosmic rays. Gamma rays. X-rays. UV. Infra-red. Micro- wave. Radar. Radio.

moswen
Download Presentation

SI23 Introduction to Computer Graphics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SI23Introduction to Computer Graphics Lecture 3 – Colour Vision

  2. Light and the Spectrum • Light is the visible form of electromagnetic energy 10-6 10-3 10-1 10 103 106 109 1012 (nm) Cosmic rays Gamma rays X-rays UV Infra-red Micro- wave Radar Radio 380 760 nanometres Red Violet Green Blue Yellow

  3. Human Visual System – The Eye

  4. Rods and Cones

  5. Light enters through cornea, passes through lens and inverted image formed on retina Cornea is main focus, lens provides the fine tuning Amount of light entering eye controlled by iris (2-8 mm) 6 million rods, 100 million rods Cones mainly in fovea, central part of retina, largely absent elsewhere – provide colour perception Rods in outer part of retina – provide non-colour peripheral vision 160,000 cells per sq mm Human Eye

  6. What do You See?

  7. Light refracted as it passes through the cornea and lens Normally eye focuses on yellow-green wavelength (560 nm) Longer red wavelengths converge beyond, blue in front of, retina To focus on red, we make lens more convex as though object nearer Effect known as chromostereopsis - works differently for different people (60% see red nearer, no effect for 10%) Combination of effects including displacement of pupil wrt optical axis of eye – which varies among people Also depends on background, effect can often reverse Colour Depth Effects

  8. Additive Mixing of Lights

  9. Colour Matching

  10. Additive Mixing of Lights and Colour Matching Experiments • When two light sources are combined, the result is a simple addition of the sources • Thomas Young (1801) showed that overlapping red, green, blue gave the secondary colours yellow, cyan, magenta; and white where all three overlap • By varying intensities, he was able to match most of the spectral hues • Colour monitors use this principle: • white produced as sum of red, green and blue • both CRT and LCD • Colour matching experiments (CIE, 1931) have given R,G,B values for single wavelength lights, averaged over a number of observers

  11. Sensitivity to Colour

  12. Sensitivity to Colour • Three types of cones: spectral absorbtioin curves have peaks at 580, 540 and 440 nm but there is considerable overlap • Each type produces response across range of wavelengths – we determine colour by the combination of the three responses • Relative numbers are: • 40:20:1 in terms of R:G:B • So our sensitivity to blue is much less

  13. Union Jack • Light sensitive elements in cones and rods are proteins known as rhodopsin • By fixating on an image, response is dulled • When replaced by white, we then see the complementary colours only

  14. Signals from eye to brain

  15. From Eye to Brain

  16. From Eye to Brain

  17. Signals from retina combine into a luminance channel, plus two opponent channels (red-green and yellow-blue differences) [as in colour TV transmission] Spatial sensitivity of Y-B less than R-G (because few B cones) – so do not show fine detail in blue against black Further processing goes on as signals leave retina by optic channel to visual cortex Finally human visual system transforms the signals into a perceptual response – which we are still trying to understand From Eye to Brain

  18. Simultaneous Contrast and Coloured Surrounds • Appearance of colour depends on lightness and colour of surrounding region – simultaneous contrast • Colours look smaller and darker against white, lighter and larger against black • Retina takes signals from wider area and does its own image processing • Coloured surrounds can cause a coloured region to be tinged with complementary hue of the surround

  19. Acknowledgement • The colour images used in this presentation were prepared by Prof Lindsey MacDonald for the UK Advisory Group on Computer Graphics

More Related