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From lower to higher colour metrics: a historical account

, PhD
Pages 348-360 | Received 07 Mar 2006, Accepted 31 Jul 2006, Published online: 15 Apr 2021
 

Abstract

Background:  ‘Lower colour metrics’ describes the laws of colour mixture as manifest in trichromatic colour space and best known in its two‐dimensional projection, the chromaticity diagram. ‘Higher colour metrics’ describes how distance in this colour space translates into perceptual difference. It is higher in the sense that it builds on the fundamentals of lower colour metrics.

Methods:  A historical account is given of the development of higher colour metrics, with many ups and downs, since Helmholtz started it at the end of the 19th Century.

Results:  Despite long periods of silence, Helmholtz’s basic ideas have survived by successfully extended modelling, which could also account for seemingly paradoxical effects of luminance and saturation on colour discrimination.

Conclusion:  The subject theme, which presently is at a low tide of interest, deserves the renewed interest of colour vision researchers.

Notes

1.a.  Interestingly, in the mentioned publication they still attribute the residual vibrations to ‘probably micro‐seismic perturbations’.

2.b.  Attention is directed to the blue corner ellipse, which seems to be the exception to the rule. Its orientation is typically deviant from the experimental data. A possible cause is described in the next section.

3.c.  The blue corner ellipse seems to be the odd one out; this might be due to the König‐Dieterici anomaly, as it lies close to the 460 nm point on the spectral locus. A further elaboration has to wait for more accurate data on the luminance dependence of the JND ellipses in that region.

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