Brain scan technology is finding that some parts of the brain respond more strongly to colour than others. Flickr/dpi For more than 200 years, scientists have known the range of colours we can see ...
We’re now somewhere over two decades since the mass adoption of digital photography made chemical film obsolete in a very short time, but the older technology remains in use by artists and enthusiasts ...
See in CMYK” by Stefanie Posavec combines the 100-year-old printing press with AI, in collaboration with Google Arts & ...
Here's something different: An iPad app that teaches colour correction the way it used to be done with analogue film Dale Grahn, who is what used to be called a Colour Timer in the days when there was ...
The Falcon-2020CRS brings 20MP full-color imaging, on-board ISP with auto exposure, AWB, color correction, and dynamic ROI to ...
Achieving accurate and precise color reproduction for traditional offset and modern digital print production is in the standards. In Printing-Process Control and Standardization, Robert Chung offers ...
We’re now somewhere over two decades since the mass adoption of digital photography made chemical film obsolete in a very short time, but the older technology remains in use by artists and enthusiasts ...
A WORLD WITHOUT COLOR appears to be missing crucial elements. And indeed it is. Colors not only enable us to see the world more precisely, they also create emergent qualities that would not exist ...
There are limits to what humans can see and how quickly they can perceive it. Some of these limits are set by the manner in which the brain processes incoming information, and it is of particular ...
Visual-object processing culminates in inferior temporal cortex (IT). To assess the organization of IT, we measured functional magnetic resonance imaging responses in alert monkeys to achromatic ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results