Impossible colors or forbidden colors are
supposed colors that cannot be perceived in normal seeing of light that is a
combination of various intensities of the various frequencies of visible light,
but are reported to be seen in special circumstances.
Types
These impossible colors are of two types:
Colors that would be seen if the output
strengths of the human eye retina's three types of cone cell (red, green, blue)
could be set to values which cannot be produced by exposing the eye in normal
seeing conditions to any possible combination of strengths of the frequencies
of visible light.
Colors that cannot be seen directly from
any combination of retina signal output from one place in one eye, but can be
generated in the brain's visual cortex by mixing color signals from the two
eyes, or from more than one part of the same eye. Examples of these colors are
bluish-yellow and reddish-green. Those colors that appear to be similar to, for
example, both red and green, or to both yellow and blue. (This does not mean
the result of mixing paints of those two colors in painting, or the result of
mixing lights of those two colors on a screen.)
Opponent process
The color opponent process is a color
theory that states that the human visual system interprets information about
color by processing signals from cone and rod cells in an antagonistic manner.
The three types of cone cells have some overlap in the wavelengths of light to
which they respond, so it is more efficient for the visual system to record
differences between the responses of cones, rather than each type of cone's
individual response. The opponent color theory suggests that there are three
opponent channels:
Red versus green.
Blue versus yellow
Black versus white (this is achromatic and
detects light-dark variation, or luminance).
Responses to one color of an opponent
channel are antagonistic to those to the other color, and signals output from a
place on the retina can contain one or the other but not both, for each
opponent pair.
Real colors
Real colors are colors that can be produced
by a physical light source. Any additive mixture of two real colors is also a
real color. When colors are displayed in the CIE 1931 XYZ color space, additive
mixture results in a color along the line between the colors being mixed. By
mixing any three colors, one can therefore create any color contained in the
triangle they describe—this is called the gamut formed by those three colors,
which are called primary colors. Any colors outside of this triangle cannot be
obtained by mixing the chosen primaries.
When defining primaries, the goal is often
to leave as many real colors in gamut as possible. Since the region of real
colors is not a triangle (see illustration), it is not possible to pick three
real colors that span the whole region. The gamut can be increased by selecting
more than three real primary colors, but since the region of real colors is not
a polygon, there always will be some colors at the edge left out. Therefore,
one selects colors outside of the region of real colors as primary colors; in
other words, imaginary primary colors. Mathematically, the gamut created in
this way contains so-called "imaginary colors".
In computer and television screen color
displays, the corners of the gamut triangle are defined by commercially
available phosphors chosen to be as near as possible to pure red and pure green
and pure blue, and thus are within the area of real colors; note that these
color space diagrams inevitably display, instead of real colors outside your
computer screen's gamut triangle, the nearest color which is inside the gamut
triangle. See page Gamut for more information about the color range available
on display devices.
Imaginary colors
One type of imaginary color (also referred
to as non-physical or unrealizable color) is a point in a color space that
corresponds to combinations of cone cell responses in one eye, that cannot be
produced by the eye in normal circumstances seeing any possible light spectrum.
Thus, no object can have an imaginary color. But such imaginary colors are
useful as mathematical abstractions for defining color spaces.
The spectral sensitivity curve of
medium-wavelength ("M") cone cells overlaps those of short-wavelength
("S") and long-wavelength ("L") cone cells. Light of any wavelength
that interacts with M cones also interacts with S or L cones, or both, to some
extent. Therefore, no wavelength (except perhaps a bit of the far red), and no
non-negative spectral power distribution, excites only one sort of cone. If,
for example, M cones could be excited alone, this would make the brain see an
imaginary color greener than any physically possible green; producing it by
seeing light would need some of the red and blue parts of visible light to have
negative power, which is impossible. Such a "hyper-green" color would
be in the CIE 1931 color space chromaticity diagram (left image to the right)
in the blank area above the colored area and between the y-axis and the line
x+y=1.
Chimerical colors
A chimerical color is an imaginary color
that can be seen temporarily by looking steadily at a strong color for a while
until some of the cone cells become fatigued, temporarily changing their color
sensitivities, and then looking at a markedly different color. They are
explained by the opponent process color theory. For example, staring at a
saturated primary-color field then looking at a white object results in an
opposing shift in hue, causing an afterimage of the complementary colors.
Exploration of the color space outside the range of "real colors" by
this means is major corroborating evidence for the opponent process theory of
color vision. Chimerical colors can be seen while seeing with one eye or with
both eyes, and are not observed to reproduce simultaneously qualities of
opposing colors (e.g. "yellowish blue"). Chimerical colors include:
Stygian colors: these are simultaneously
dark and impossibly saturated. For example, to see "stygian blue":
staring at bright yellow causes a dark blue afterimage, then on looking at
black, the blue is seen as blue against the black, but due to lack of the usual
brightness contrast it seems to be as dark as the black. The eye retina
contains some neurons that fire only in the dark.
Self-luminous colors: these mimic the
effect of a glowing material, even when viewed on a medium such as paper, which
can only reflect and not emit its own light. For example, to see
"self-luminous red": staring at green causes a red afterimage, then
on looking at white, the red is seen against the white and may seem to be
brighter than the white.
Hyperbolic colors: these are impossibly
highly saturated. For example, to see "hyperbolic orange": staring at
bright cyan causes an orange afterimage, then on looking at orange, the
resulting orange afterimage seen against the orange background may cause an
orange color purer than the purest orange color that can be made by any
normally-seen light. Or, staring at something pure magenta in bright sunlight
for two minutes or more, thus temporarily making the red and blue cones less
sensitive, and then looking at green leaves, may result in briefly seeing an
unnaturally pure green afterimage.
Claimed evidence for ability to see
impossible colors not in the color space
Under normal circumstances, there is no hue
that could be described as a mixture of opponent hues; that is, as a hue
looking "redgreen" or "yellowblue".
In 1983, Hewitt D. Crane and Thomas P.
Piantanida performed tests using an eye-tracker device that had a field of a
vertical red stripe adjacent to a vertical green stripe, or several narrow
alternating red and green stripes (or in some cases, yellow and blue instead).
The device could track involuntary movements of one eye (there was a patch over
the other eye) and adjust mirrors so the image would follow the eye and the
boundaries of the stripes were always on the same places on the eye's retina;
the field outside the stripes was blanked with occluders. Under such
conditions, the edges between the stripes seemed to disappear (perhaps due to
edge-detecting neurons becoming fatigued) and the colors flowed into each other
in the brain's visual cortex, overriding the opponency mechanisms and producing
not the color expected from mixing paints or from mixing lights on a screen,
but new colors entirely, which are not in the CIE 1931 color space, either in
its real part or in its imaginary parts. For red-and-green, some saw an even
field of the new color; some saw a regular pattern of just-visible green dots
and red dots; some saw islands of one color on a background of the other color.
Some of the volunteers for the experiment reported that afterwards, they could
still imagine the new colors for a period of time.
Some observers indicated that although they
were aware that what they were viewing was a color (that is, the field was not
achromatic), they were unable to name or describe the color. One of these
observers was an artist with a large color vocabulary. Other observers of the
novel hues described the first stimulus as a reddish-green.
In 2001 Vincent A. Billock and Gerald A.
Gleason and Brian H. Tsou set up an experiment to test a theory that the 1983
experiment did not control for variations in the perceived luminance of the
colors from subject to subject: two colors are equiluminant for an observer
when rapidly alternating between the colors produces the least impression of
flickering. The 2001 experiment was similar but controlled for luminance. They
had these observations:
Some subjects (4 out of 7) described
transparency phenomena—as though the opponent colors originated in two depth
planes and could be seen, one through the other. ...
We found that when colors were
equiluminant, subjects saw reddish greens, bluish yellows, or a multistable
spatial color exchange (an entirely novel perceptual phenomena [sic]); when the
colors were nonequiluminant, subjects saw spurious pattern formation.
This led them to propose a "soft-wired
model of cortical color opponency", in which populations of neurons
compete to fire and in which the "losing" neurons go completely
silent. In this model, eliminating competition by, for instance, inhibiting
connections between neural populations can allow mutually exclusive neurons to
fire together.
Hsieh and Tse in 2006 disputed the
existence of colors forbidden by opponency theory and claimed they are, in
reality, intermediate colors. See also binocular rivalry.
In synesthetes
Some individuals with X → color synesthesia claim to be able
to perceive impossible colors when, for example, two nearby letters have
opposing colors. So, someone who has grapheme → color synesthesia, and who considers a to be red and n to be green
might be able to perceive red-green if these two letters occur consecutively,
like in the word an.
Source From Wikipedia
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