Summary
This paper discusses the dimensionality of color perception, including the potential for expanded dimensions beyond the standard three, and the implications of this for color vision and perception.
Categories
Cognitive function and memory: The paper discusses the cognitive function of color perception and how it may be more complex than previously thought.
Eye health: The paper discusses the function of the eye in perceiving color, including the roles of different types of photoreceptors.
Lighting Design Considerations: The paper discusses how understanding the complexity of color perception could impact lighting design.
Author(s)
F ViƩnot
Publication Year
2015
Number of Citations
1
Related Publications
Cognitive function and memory
- Phototransduction by retinal ganglion cells that set the circadian clock
- The twoāprocess model of sleep regulation: a reappraisal
- Strange vision: ganglion cells as circadian photoreceptors
- Information processing in the primate retina: circuitry and coding
- Melanopsin-positive intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells: from form to function
Eye health
- Phototransduction by retinal ganglion cells that set the circadian clock
- Color appearance models
- Diminished pupillary light reflex at high irradiances in melanopsin-knockout mice
- Strange vision: ganglion cells as circadian photoreceptors
- Genetic reactivation of cone photoreceptors restores visual responses in retinitis pigmentosa
Lighting Design Considerations
- Color appearance models
- Melanopsin-positive intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells: from form to function
- Acute alerting effects of light: A systematic literature review
- Form and function of the M4 cell, an intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cell type contributing to geniculocortical vision
- Melanopsin and rodācone photoreceptors play different roles in mediating pupillary light responses during exposure to continuous light in humans