Bezold–Brücke shift
The Bezold–Brücke shift or luminance-on-hue effect[1] is a change in hue perception as the luminance (light intensity) of a color changes. As intensity increases, the apparent hue of stimuli of a constant spectral distribution shifts towards blue, if its dominant wavelength is below around 500 nm; or yellow, if its dominant wavelength is above 500 nm. As intensity is decreased, apparent hue shifts towards red or green.[2]
The effect was noted in 1866 by physiologist Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke, and experimental investigations by physicist and meteorologist Wilhelm von Bezold were published in 1873.[3] It was re-investigated more thoroughly by Donald McL. Purdy in 1931.[4]
Stimuli of certain wavelengths ("invariant hues") retain their apparent hue despite changes in luminance; these have similar but not quite the same wavelengths as the unique hues red, yellow, blue, and green.[5][6]
A similar hue shift, the Abney effect, occurs when a visual stimulus is mixed with white light. Both the Abney effect and the Bezold–Brücke shift apply not only to colors in isolation, but also to surface colors: for example, due to the Bezold–Brücke shift, the highlights and shadows of an object can appear to have different hues.[7]
The shift in the hue is also accompanied by the changes in the perceived saturation. As the brightness of the color stimuli increases, their color strength also increases to a maximum point and then decreases again; in such a way that it is still wavelength specific. This can, to an extent, be considered as an inverse of the Helmholtz–Kohlrausch effect.Template:Fact In the case of the Helmholtz–Kohlrausch effect, the partially desaturated stimulus is seen to be brighter than fully saturated or achromatic stimulus.
See also
Bibliography
- W. von Bezold: Die Farbenlehre in Hinblick auf Kunst und Kunstgewerbe. Braunschweig 1874. Full text scan
- "Über das Gesetz der Farbenmischung und die physiologischen Grundfarben", Annalen der Physiologischen Chemie, 1873, 226: 221–247.
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References
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