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Original Articles

A System of Photometry and Colorimetry Based Directly on Visual Response

Pages 99-111 | Published online: 20 Sep 2013

References

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  • See, for example, the series of papers byJamesonD. and HurvichL. M., Journal of the Optical Society of America, Vol. 45, 1955, pp 546 and 602; Vol. 46, 1956, p. 405.
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  • For example, tristimulus Y is proportional to the calculated luminous flux in the present CIE system, and does by definition represent the luminance of a light; the luminance correlates under certain conditions to the perceived brightness of the light.
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  • They play an important role in Wright's original work2 for example.
  • The appropriate yellow and blue-green orthogonal pairs may vary somewhat from observer to observer. For example, some orthogonal pairs are: 581.1 nm, 492 nm; 581.6 nm, 494 nm; 582.0 nm, 496 nm; 582.4 nm, 498 nm.
  • Compare, for example, the discussion inLanczosC., Applied Analysis, Prentice Hall, 1956, p. 358.
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  • Such a product function is permissible so long as it is used as a function, and integration is not performed.
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  • Because color-matching function z̄ is identical to response function b̄. Of the 1931 CIE color-matching functions x̄, ȳ, x̄, only z̄ appears to be uniquely related to visual response, and is one of the functions of which m̄(λ) and n̄(λ) are linear combinations.
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  • Possible exceptions are the spectral colors near 490 nm and 580 nm.
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