Showing posts with label CIE XYZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CIE XYZ. Show all posts

Friday, 14 October 2016

CIE XYZ:


The basic CIE colour space, or colour model, is based on a 'Standard Observer and 'Standard Illuminants' (D50, D65, etc.). This is a numerical model of colour sensitivity based on research commenced in the 1920s on a sample of people with normal colour vision. It is a 'universal colour space' representing the colour spectrum visible to the 'average human'. The light-sensitive retina at the back of the eye has three types of receptors near the centre, known as cones. They are sensitive to the three primaries, 'red, green and blue'. The CIE XYZ tristimulus values are assigned to the red, green and blue curves respectively. These approximate to the cones in the eye. The relative response of each is plotted on a diagram against the wavelength in nanometers. The eye also has rods, outside of the retina's centre, which are sensitive to low-wavelength light and which only operate at low levels of illumination. There are two axes: vertical and horizontal.

The vertical axis represents Relative Response 0 - 2.0 (shown here) or Reflective Intensity 0 - 120% (not shown).
The horizontal axis represents Wavelength in nanometers, usually from about 380 to about 720nm.
It should be emphasized that this is a 'device-independent' colour space in which each primary colour (X,Y,Z) is always constant, unlike  RGB which varies with every individual device (monitor, scanner, camera, etc.). XYZ is typically used to report the spectral response of a sample measured by a colorimeter or a spectrophotometer. A colorimeter may contain as few as three sensors, one each for red, green and blue, (or X, Y and Z), and will typically be used for display calibration and profiling. A spectrophotometer will report the entire spectral response at frequent intervals along the spectrum, say every 10 nanometres, and will typically be used to measure printed sheets to control a press or create an ICC profile.
While CIE XYZ is used to report colour from measuring instruments, it is not so useful for humans to describe colour. Another use is as the Profile Connection Space (PCS) within an ICC profile, where it may be used instead of CIE Lab.
You may notice that the Y ('green curve') covers the widest wavelength. This corresponds to the overall human visual response to all colours, or lightness. It is therefore also used to indicate luminance ('lightness').

CIE L*a*b*: In such case the vertical L* axis represents Lightness, ranging from 0-100.  The other (horizontal) axes are now represented by a* and b*. These are at right angles to each other and cross each other in the centre, which is neutral (grey, black or white). They are based on the principal that a colour cannot be both red and green, or blue and yellow. 
      The a* axis is green at one extremity (represented by -a), and red at the other (+a). The b* axis has blue at one end (-b), and yellow (+b) at the other. 
The centre of each axis is 0. A value of 0, or very low numbers of both a* and b* will describe a neutral or near neutral. In the case of paper, the white point in terms of a* and b* is usually carried through to the black, being gradually reduced towards '0'.
In theory there are no maximum values of a* and b*, but in practice they are usually numbered from -128 to +127 (256 levels).
The CIE Lab colour model encompasses the entire spectrum, including colours outside of human vision. CIE Lab is extensively used in many industries apart from printing and photography. Its uses include providing exact colour specifications for paint (including automotive, household, etc.), dyes (including textiles, plastics, etc.), printing ink and paper. 


CIE Color Systems

CIE Color Systems The CIE, or Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage (translated as the International Commission on Illumination), is the body responsible for international recommendations for photometry and colorimetry.

In 1931 the CIE standardized color order systems by specifying the light source (or illuminants), the observer and the methodology used to derive values for describing color.

The CIE system characterizes colour by a luminance Y and two colour coordinates x and y which specify the point on the chromatic diagram. This system offers more precision in colour measurement than do the Munsell system because the parameters are based on the spectral power distribution of the light emitted from a coloured object and is factored by sensitivity curves which have been measured for the human eye.

Based on the fact that the human eye has three different types of color sensitive cones, the response of the eye is best described in terms of three "tristimulus values". However, once this is accomplished, it is found that any color can be expressed in terms of the two color coordinates x and y.
The colors which can be matched by combining a given set of three primary colors (such as the blue, green, and red) are represented on the chromaticity diagram by a triangle joining the coordinates for the three colors.

The diagram given below represents the  mapping of human color perception in terms of two CIE parameters x and y. The spectral colors are distributed around the edge of the "color space" as shown, and that outline includes all of the perceived hues and provides a framework for investigating color.
The CIE Color Systems utilize three coordinates to locate a color in a color space. These color spaces include:

• CIE XYZ
• CIE L*a*b*
• CIE L*C*h°

Monday, 24 November 2014

CIE Color Systems

CIE Color Systems The CIE, or Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage (translated as the International Commission on Illumination), is the body responsible for international recommendations for photometry and colorimetry.

In 1931 the CIE standardized color order systems by specifying the light source (or illuminants), the observer and the methodology used to derive values for describing color. The CIE Color Systems utilize three coordinates to locate a color in a color space. These color spaces include:

• CIE XYZ
• CIE L*a*b*
• CIE L*C*h°