Color appearance models /
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Author / Creator: | Fairchild, Mark D. |
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Imprint: | Reading, Mass. : Addison-Wesley, c1998. |
Description: | xvii, 417 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 25 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2949528 |
Table of Contents:
- Series Preface
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1. Human Color Vision
- 1.1. Optics of the Eye
- 1.2. The Retina
- 1.3. Visual Signal Processing
- 1.4. Mechanisms of Color Vision
- 1.5. Spatial and Temporal Properties of Color Vision
- 1.6. Color Vision Deficiencies
- 1.7. Key Features for Color Appearance Modeling
- 2. Psychophysics
- 2.1. Psychophysics Defined
- 2.2. Historical Context
- 2.3. Hierarchy of Scales
- 2.4. Threshold Techniques
- 2.5. Matching Techniques
- 2.6. One-Dimensional Scaling
- 2.7. Multidimensional Scaling
- 2.8. Design of Psychophysical Experiments
- 2.9. Importance in Color Appearance Modeling
- 3. Colorimetry
- 3.1. Basic and Advanced Colorimetry
- 3.2. Why is Color?
- 3.3. Light Sources and Illuminants
- 3.4. Colored Materials
- 3.5. The Human Visual Response
- 3.6. Tristimulus Values and Color Matching Functions
- 3.7. Chromaticity Diagrams
- 3.8. CIE Color Spaces
- 3.9. Color Difference Specification
- 3.10. The Next Step
- 4. Color Appearance Terminology
- 4.1. Importance of Definitions
- 4.2. Color
- 4.3. Hue
- 4.4. Brightness and Lightness
- 4.5. Colorfulness and Chroma
- 4.6. Saturation
- 4.7. Unrelated and Related Colors
- 4.8. Definitions in Equations
- 4.9. Brightness-Colorfulness vs Lightness-Chroma
- 5. Color Order Systems
- 5.1. Overview and Requirements
- 5.2. The Munsell Book of Color
- 5.3. The Swedish Natural Color System (NCS)
- 5.4. The Colorcurve System
- 5.5. Other Color Order Systems
- 5.6. Uses of Color Order Systems
- 5.7. Color Naming Systems
- 6. Color Appearance Phenomena
- 6.1. What Are Color Appearance Phenomena?
- 6.2. Simultaneous Contrast, Crispening, and Spreading
- 6.3. Bezold-Brucke Hue Shift (Hue Changes with Luminance)
- 6.4. Abney Effect (Hue Changes with Colorimetric Purity)
- 6.5. Helmholtz-Kohlrausch Effect (Brightness Depends on Luminance and Chromaticity)
- 6.6. Hunt Effect (Colorfulness Increases with Luminance)
- 6.7. Stevens Effect (Contrast Increases with Luminance)
- 6.8. Helson- Judd Effect (Hue of Nonselective Samples)
- 6.9. Bartleson-Breneman Equations (Image Contrast Changes with Surround)
- 6.10. Discounting the Illuminant
- 6.11. Other Context and Structural Effects
- 6.12. Color Constancy?
- 7. Viewing Conditions
- 7.1. Configuration of the Viewing Field
- 7.2. Colorimetric Specification of the Viewing Field
- 7.3. Modes of Viewing
- 7.4. Unrelated and Related Colors Revisited
- 8. Chromatic Adaptation
- 8.1. Light, Dark, and Chromatic Adaptation
- 8.2. Physiology
- 8.3. Sensory and Cognitive Mechanisms
- 8.4. Corresponding-colors Data
- 8.5. Models
- 8.6. Computational Color Constancy
- 9. Chromatic Adaptation Models
- 9.1. Von Kries Model
- 9.2. Retinex Theory
- 9.3. Nayatani et al. Model
- 9.4. Guth's Model
- 9.5. Fairchild's Model
- 9.6. Herding CATs
- 9.7. CAT02
- 10. Color Appearance Models
- 10.1. Definition of Color Appearance Models
- 10.2. Construction of Color Appearance Models
- 10.3. CIELAB
- 10.4. Why Not Use Just CIELAB?
- 10.5. What About CIELUV?
- 11. The Nayatani et al. Model
- 11.1. Objectives and Approach
- 11.2. Input Data
- 11.3. Adaptation Model
- 11.4. Opponent Color Dimensions
- 11.5. Brightness
- 11.6. Lightness
- 11.7. Hue
- 11.8. Saturation
- 11.9. Chroma
- 11.10. Colorfulness
- 11.