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A PHYSICALLY BASED INTERPRETATION OF THE HUE OF SURFACES (PP04, 498-502)
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Conference Proceeding by Commission Internationale de L'Eclairage, 10/23/2017
From an early age, people learn to recognize the hues of coloured surfaces, distinguishing roughly 40 different hues in a cyclic pattern. Human perception of surface hue depends only weakly on the correlated colour temperature (CCT) and intensity of illumination, and the saturation and lightness of the surface. Thus, hue seems like a real, independent physical characteristic. However, it does not correlate well with the spectral power distribution of light reflecting from an object. Contrast this with the perceived weight of an object, which relates directly to a simple physical characteristic – mass. Is there a simple physical correlate for hue?We show that hue does correlate very well with the plot of an object?s surface reflectance versus wavelength – hue is the polar angle defined by the plot?s average curvature and average slope. Detecting this may have been evolutionarily advantageous because it correlates well with specific substances present within an object?s surface.
Product Details
- Published:
- 10/23/2017
- Number of Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 1 file , 1.2 MB
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