Abstract

Color information has great value in our everyday lives, but it is not mindful of people with color vision deficiency (CVD). We can choose several color names to categorize a lot of colors around us. Eleven color names (white, black, red, green, yellow, blue, brown, orange, pink, and gray) are known as basic color categories, but people with CVD cannot necessarily describe colors as people who are color vision normal (CVN) do. Previous studies showed that it was hard for people with CVD to discriminate illuminant color from object color, and their color perception changed largely depending on experimental conditions. In this study we investigated categorical color perception of illuminant color for deuteranomals, using a mixture of light which consists of a red, a green, and a blue LED as a test stimulus. We tested those stimuli with three luminance levels (180 cd/m2, 18 cd/m2, 1.8 cd/m2) and two visual angles (10 deg, 0.5 deg). Subjects were three deuteranomals and three people who are CVN. Our result sh...

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