JOURNAL OF THE COLOR SCIENCE ASSOCIATION OF JAPAN
Online ISSN : 2189-552X
Print ISSN : 0389-9357
ISSN-L : 0389-9357
Volume 41, Issue 4
Displaying 1-2 of 2 articles from this issue
  • Shengai Jin, Yasuhiro Kawabata
    Article type: Original Paper
    2017 Volume 41 Issue 4 Pages 143-153
    Published: July 01, 2017
    Released on J-STAGE: July 20, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    This study investigated the relation between two-color combination preferences and left-right color position within the combinations. It also measured the reaction time for its examination and eye movement among students aged between 20 and 30 years. In this study, we found that in the opposite color combination, light tone was more preferred than vivid, dark tones; moreover, the ratings for blue-yellow pairs were higher than redgreen in the same tone of component colors. Regarding the left-right position within color pairs, warm-to-cool pairs were significantly preferred over cool-to-warm even though same colors were used in both. We found that in this case, people pay more attention to the right components than the left in spite of the distance between the components of these color-pairs. Moreover, the reaction time became shorter as the color preference increased.

    Download PDF (1222K)
  • Shoji Sunaga, Shigehito Katsura, Sachiyo Mitsuyasu
    Article type: Letter
    2017 Volume 41 Issue 4 Pages 154-160
    Published: July 01, 2017
    Released on J-STAGE: July 20, 2017
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    In this study, we measured visual search performances cued by the S-cone stimulus value for trichromats and severe anomalous trichromats, and compared them. The stimulus consisted of 13 disks on an achromatic background. Twelve disks of them were distractor disks and the rest was a target disk. Two colors whose S-cone stimulus values were different, were assigned to six distractors, respectively. The S-cone stimulus value of the target color was set to the midpoint of two distractor colors. The stimulus duration was varied as a parameter. The observer’s task was to respond which quadrant the target disk which the target color was assigned was on. The correct responses were measured as a function of stimulus duration. We calculated stimulus duration thresholds providing the correct responses of 0.724, and compared those between trichromats and severe anomalous trichromats. The results showed that the stimulus duration thresholds of trichromats became as long as or longer than those of severe anomalous trichromats. This suggests that trichromacy does not always have an advantage over dichromacy.

    Download PDF (1335K)
feedback
Top