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Color Blindness • http://www.iamcal.com/misc/colors/ Vision • 4 steps to vision – Gather light into our eye. – Light is channeled to the back of the eye. – Transduction occurs – Information goes to occipital lobe. • Transduction: The conversion of one form of energy into another. What is Color? • Color does not exist in our world. Your eyes make color exist. • What you see if energy. To be visible the light must be the appropriate wavelength. The Eye Eye Parts • Pupil: Adjustable opening in the center of the eye where light enters. • Iris: a ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil. • Lens: structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images. • Retina: The light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, contains receptor rods and is the area where information begins to be processed. Eye Parts • Rods: retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray. • Cones: retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina. Detect fine detail and give rise to color sensations. • Optic Nerve: nerve that carries neural impulses to the brain. • Blind Spot: The point where the optic nerve leaves the eye. (Creates spots in vision you can not see) • Fovea: Central area of focus. Cones cluster in this area. How does the brain process visual information? Feature Detection • David Hubel and Torsten Wisel showed us in 1979 how neurons in the occipital lobe receive information from ganglion cells in the retina. • Feature detectors: – Nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus. (shape, angle, movement) Parallel Processing • Parallel Processing is how our brain processes information. – Parallel- doing multiple things at once. – Ex. We process color, motion, form, and depth of an object all at once. Young-Helmholtz Trichromatic (threecolor) theory • Trichromatic theory: – Our retina contains three different color receptors—one most sensitive to red, one to green, one to blue. These three receptors can produce the perception of any color. Opponent-process theory • The theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enables color vision. • Creates an afterimage effect. – An image you see after staring at an image. Opponent-Process Theory Demo • Demo: – You can demonstrate this for yourself by staring at the red dot in the middle of the image below for 30 seconds without letting your eyes drift from the center; then look at a blank white sheet and you will see the image with a more familiar set of colors. (It may take a while for the image to develop).