Abstract

BackgroundThe ability to discriminate between two similar or progressively dissimilar colours is important for many animals as it allows for accurately interpreting visual signals produced by key target stimuli or distractor information. Spectrophotometry objectively measures the spectral characteristics of these signals, but is often limited to point samples that could underestimate spectral variability within a single sample. Algorithms for RGB images and digital imaging devices with many more than three channels, hyperspectral cameras, have been recently developed to produce image spectrophotometers to recover reflectance spectra at individual pixel locations. We compare a linearised RGB and a hyperspectral camera in terms of their individual capacities to discriminate between colour targets of varying perceptual similarity for a human observer.Main Findings(1) The colour discrimination power of the RGB device is dependent on colour similarity between the samples whilst the hyperspectral device enables the reconstruction of a unique spectrum for each sampled pixel location independently from their chromatic appearance. (2) Uncertainty associated with spectral reconstruction from RGB responses results from the joint effect of metamerism and spectral variability within a single sample.Conclusion(1) RGB devices give a valuable insight into the limitations of colour discrimination with a low number of photoreceptors, as the principles involved in the interpretation of photoreceptor signals in trichromatic animals also apply to RGB camera responses. (2) The hyperspectral camera architecture provides means to explore other important aspects of colour vision like the perception of certain types of camouflage and colour constancy where multiple, narrow-band sensors increase resolution.

Highlights

  • The biological world is full of diversity, yet nothing attracts more ‘human’ attention than colour

  • We reconstructed the reflectance spectra from ten pixel sample points for each one of the 14 colour targets making up seven selected pair samples varying in colour difference (Fig 1) using an RGB and a hyperspectral camera system

  • The total number of reflectance spectra making up a given metamer set was not constant but was found to be significantly correlated with the sample’s position within the convex hull produced by the calibration samples (Eq 5)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The biological world is full of diversity, yet nothing attracts more ‘human’ attention than colour. One individual photoreceptor type pools all photons and only the resulting signal is processed by an opponent network in the brain, and each individual receptor type cannot differentiate between a change in wavelength and a change in intensity [4]. This physiological principle allows for the economic production of colour monitors and commercial level cameras that use just three red, green and blue (RGB) colour channels to represent normal human colour perception [18]. We compare a linearised RGB and a hyperspectral camera in terms of their individual capacities to discriminate between colour targets of varying perceptual similarity for a human observer

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call