| Evaluating the 1931 CIE Color Matching Functions |
| Mark Q. Shaw |
|
The use of colorimetry within industry has grown extensively in the last few decades. Central to many of today’s instruments is the work of the CIE system, established in 1931. Many have questioned the validity of the assumptions made by Wright (1928-29) and Guild (1931), some suggesting that the 1931 color matching functions are not the best representation of the human visual systems’ cone responses.
An optimization was then performed on the CIE 1931 color matching functions. The concept was that color differences between metamers can be used to improve predictions of color matching functions. If one is to take all pairs, and perform an optimization that globally minimizes the average color difference, then one can hope to obtain an optimal set of responsivity functions. The optimum solution was to use a weighted combination of each of the different sets of responsivity functions. The optimized set, the ‘Shaw and Fairchild’ responsivity functions, were able to reduce the average color difference down to 3.92 DE*ab. The final part of the work was to build a computer based simulation of the color differences between the different sets of responsivity functions. This simulation allows a user to load a spectral radiance, or reflectance, data file and display the tristimulus match predicted by each of the seven sets of responsivity functions. If you would like to see the work in further detail, please feel free
to download the documents listed below. For the compressed archives, right click (PC)
or control-click(Mac) and select "Save Link As..."
|
| Download an Adobe Acrobat PDF of the Thesis (1.6Mb) | CMF_Thesis.pdf |
| Download an Adobe Acrobat PDF of the Appendices (0.8Mb) |
|
| Download an Adobe Acrobat PDF of the Thesis Presentation (0.9Mb) | Final_Presentation.pdf |
| Download a file of the IDL Simulation source code (0.2Mb), either in PK Zip (PC) or Stuffit (Mac) | Simulation.zip
Simulation.sea |
| Download a copy of the complete bundle (3.2Mb), either in PK Zip (PC) or Stuffit (Mac) | CMF_Thesis.zip
CMF_Thesis.sea |
|
Please address any comments, questions, bugs, or general correspondance to Mark To see further publications, papers, or information, please visit my home page : http://www.cis.rit.edu/~mqs1998 |