11 research outputs found

    When geometry meets psycho-physics and quantum mechanics : Modern perspectives on the space of perceived colors

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    We discuss some modern perspectives about the mathematical formalization of colorimetry, motivated by the analysis of a groundbreaking, yet poorly known, model of the color space proposed by H.L. Resnikoff and based on differential geometry. In particular, we will underline two facts: the first is the need of novel, carefully implemented, psycho-physical experiments and the second is the role that Jordan algebras may have in the development of a more rigorously founded colorimetry

    Geometry of color perception. Part 1: Structures and metrics of a homogeneous color space

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    This is the first half of a two-part paper dealing with the geometry of color perception. Here we analyze in detail the seminal 1974 work by H.L. Resnikoff, who showed that there are only two possible geometric structures and Riemannian metrics on the perceived color space P compatible with the set of Schrödinger's axioms completed with the hypothesis of homogeneity. We recast Resnikoff's model into a more modern colorimetric setting, provide a much simpler proof of the main result of the original paper and motivate the need of psychophysical experiments to confute or confirm the linearity of background transformations, which act transitively on P. Finally, we show that the Riemannian metrics singled out by Resnikoff through an axiom on invariance under background transformations are not compatibles with the crispening effect, thus motivating the need of further research about perceptual color metrics
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