80 likes | 298 Views
Basics of Color Vision. Wavelength: determines color – longer=red/shorter= violet Amplitude: determines brightness Purity: determines saturation. Theories of Color Vision. Trichromatic theory – Young and Helmholtz Receptors for red, green, blue color mixing
E N D
Basics of Color Vision Wavelength: determines color – longer=red/shorter= violet Amplitude: determines brightness Purity: determines saturation
Theories of Color Vision • Trichromatic theory – Young and Helmholtz • Receptors for red, green, blue color mixing • Opponent Process theory – Hering • Three pairs of antagonistic colors • Red/green, blue/yellow, black/white
Current Perspective • Both theories are necessary to explain color vision.
Perceiving Forms, Patterns and Objects • Reversible figures • Perceptual sets • Inattentional blindness • Feature detection theory – bottom-up processing • Form perception – top-down processing • Subjective contours • Gestalt psychologists: the whole is more than the sum of its parts reversible figures and perceptual sets demonstrate that the same visual stimulus can result in bery different perceptions
Principles of Perception • Gestalt principles of form perception: • Figure-ground, proximity, similarity, continuity, closure, and simplicity • Recent research: • Distal (stimuli outside the body) vs. proximal (stimulus energies impinging on sensory receptors) stimuli. • Perceptual hypotheses • context
Depth and Distance Perception • Binocular cues – clues from both eyes together • Retinal disparity • Convergence • Monocular cues – clues from a single eye • Motion parallax • Accommodation • Pictorial depth cues
Stability in the Perceptual World: Perceptual Constancies • Perceptual constancies – stable perceptions amid changing stimuli • Size • Shape • Brightness • Hue • Location in space
Optical Illusions: the power of misleading cues • Optical illusions – discrepancy between visual appearance and physical reality • Famous optical illusions: Muller-Lyer Illusion, Ponzo Illusion, Poggendorf Illusion, Upside-Down T Illusion, Zollner Illusion, the Ames Room, and Impossible Figures • Cultural differences: perceptual hypotheses at work