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Past studies have hinted that average colour rendering measures, with a particular focus on average gamut area measures, cannot predict the colour discrimination ability of highly structured spectra. A recent study by Esposito and Houser solidified this fi nding, and showed that a new measure, Rd—an error score based on the light-source induced hue transpositions of the FM-100 hue test—could reliably predict error scores. The current study optimized spectra using Rd (and accompanying sub-indices) to determine if several individual transpositions, each with a different nominal hue, would result in different c olour discrimination ability. The results show that four separate stimuli, each of which transposes one cap at different hue angl es, do not produce statistically different mean error scores. Assuming the FM -100 hue test is indicative of colour discrimination ability and knowing that cap transpositions are a strong predictor of FM – 100 error scores, the results suggest that colour discrimination ability may not differ based on hue.
Product Details
- Published:
- 10/23/2017
- Number of Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 1 file , 1.7 MB