Title :
Color blindness and a color human visual system model
Author :
Martin, Curtis E. ; Keller, John G. ; Rogers, Steven K. ; Kabrinsky, M.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Technol., Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, USA
fDate :
7/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A physiologically motivated human color visual system model which represents visual information with one brightness component (A) and two chromatic components (C1 and C2) is used to create stimuli for testing the color perception of deuteranomalous trichromats. Two experiments are performed. Using simple ramp patterns, the first experiment finds that three deuteranomalous trichromat test subjects can distinguish variations only in the C2 component of the color vision model. This finding is further tested in the second experiment: a set of paired comparison preference tests. Two altered versions of each of three natural color images are prepared by setting either one of the color components to a constant over the full image. Pairs of an original and a distorted image are presented to the test subjects, and they are asked to indicate which image they prefer. The experimental results indicate that the C1 channel is severely attenuated in the deuteranomalous trichromat test subjects, and that nearly all their color sensation is mediated by the C2 channel of the color vision model
Keywords :
colour vision; physiological models; color blindness; color perception; color vision model; deuteranomalous trichromats; human visual system; physiological model; Absorption; Biomedical monitoring; Brightness; Color; Humans; Image processing; Machine vision; System testing; Vision defects; Visual system;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/3468.852442