Deck 5: The Perception of Color

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Question
Which of the following lists the steps in color perception in the correct order?

A) Detection, appearance, discrimination
B) Appearance, detection, discrimination
C) Detection, discrimination, appearance
D) Appearance, discrimination, detection
E) Discrimination, detection, appearance
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Question
Which photoreceptors do not contribute to color vision?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) Rods
E) All of these photoreceptors contribute to color vision.
Question
Which photoreceptors are most active when looking at a beautiful sunset?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) Rods
E) S-cones and rods
Question
Which photoreceptors are most active when looking at a blue sky?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) M- and L-cones
E) Rods
Question
Which photoreceptors are most active when looking at a green forest?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) Rods
E) All cones would be equally active.
Question
Which color pair is farthest apart in wavelength?

A) Green and red
B) Blue and red
C) Blue and yellow
D) Green and purple
E) Blue and purple
Question
What type of lighting conditions occurs during the daytime in full sunlight?

A) Photopic
B) Mesopic
C) Biopic
D) Monopic
E) Scotopic
Question
Refer to the image.
<strong>Refer to the image.   What kind of lighting condition is depicted in the image?</strong> A) Photopic B) Mesopic C) Biopic D) Monopic E) Scotopic <div style=padding-top: 35px> What kind of lighting condition is depicted in the image?

A) Photopic
B) Mesopic
C) Biopic
D) Monopic
E) Scotopic
Question
Refer to the image.
<strong>Refer to the image.   The moonlit world depicted in the image appears to be drained of color because</strong> A) we can only use two types of rod photoreceptors under these conditions. B) in photopic conditions, only our rods are active. C) in scotopic conditions, only our rods are active. D) in photopic conditions, only our cones are active. E) in scotopic conditions, only our S-cones are active. <div style=padding-top: 35px> The moonlit world depicted in the image appears to be drained of color because

A) we can only use two types of rod photoreceptors under these conditions.
B) in photopic conditions, only our rods are active.
C) in scotopic conditions, only our rods are active.
D) in photopic conditions, only our cones are active.
E) in scotopic conditions, only our S-cones are active.
Question
The principle of univariance refers to the fact that

A) we have three types of cones in our visual system.
B) an infinite set of different wavelength-intensity combinations can elicit the same response from a single type of photoreceptor.
C) an infinite set of different wavelength-intensity combinations can elicit the same response from three different types of photoreceptors that are compared to each other.
D) many shades of colors appear the same under certain lighting conditions.
E) an infinite set of cones can record the same response from a single wavelength.
Question
According to the principle of univariance, which genetic difference in color vision would cause someone to be truly color-blind?

A) Deuteranope
B) Protanope
C) Tritanope
D) Color-anomalous
E) Cone monochromat
Question
_______ are different mixtures of wavelengths that look identical.

A) Subtractive light mixtures
B) Additive light mixtures
C) Hues
D) Metamers
E) Illuminants
Question
According to the _______ theory, the color of any light is defined in our visual system by the relationships among three numbers of a set.

A) univariance
B) saturation
C) trichromacy
D) opponent color
E) subtractive color mixing
Question
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   Which scientist developed the color-matching technique depicted in the figure?</strong> A) Helmholtz B) Young C) Maxwell D) Smith E) Newton <div style=padding-top: 35px> Which scientist developed the color-matching technique depicted in the figure?

A) Helmholtz
B) Young
C) Maxwell
D) Smith
E) Newton
Question
How many lights (of the correct type) are required to match any color that humans can see?

A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Four
E) Five
Question
RGB televisions and computer monitors have red, green, and blue pixels. Why don't they have yellow pixels?

A) Red + blue is a metamer for yellow.
B) Green + blue is a metamer for yellow.
C) Red + green is a metamer for yellow.
D) Red + green + blue is a metamer for yellow.
E) Red + green + blue pixels stimulate the rods, which perceive yellow.
Question
Mixing paints to create new colors is an example of _______ color mixing, while shining lights to create new colors is an example of _______ color mixing.

A) additive; subtractive
B) subtractive; additive
C) additive; component
D) multiple; opponent
E) opponent; multiple
Question
When adding colors, blue and yellow create white through _______ color mixing and create green through _______ color mixing.

A) additive; subtractive
B) subtractive; additive
C) additive; component
D) multiple; opponent
E) opponent; multiple
Question
What kind of cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) compute chromatic differences, such as (L-M) and (M-L)?

A) Amacrine cells
B) Bipolar cells
C) Cone-opponent cells
D) Rod-opponent cells
E) Stereo cells
Question
How many dimensions does color space consist of?

A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Four
E) Five
Question
Which of the following values (ranging from 0 to 255) in RGB color space would represent the color white?

A) R:255, G:0, B:0
B) R:0, G:255, B:0
C) R:0, G:0, B:000
D) R:255, G:255, B:255
E) R:0, G:0, B:0
Question
In HSB (hue, saturation, brightness) color space, how does red differ from pink?

A) Red has more hue than pink.
B) Red has more saturation than pink.
C) Red has more brightness than pink.
D) Pink has more hue than red.
E) Pink has more saturation than red.
Question
According to the opponent color theory, the perception of color is based on the output of _______ cones, each of them an opponency between _______ colors.

A) two; two
B) three; two
C) three; three
D) four; two
E) four; three
Question
Which of the following correctly lists the color-opponent pairs coded by the visual system?

A) Blue versus red; yellow versus green; black versus white
B) Blue versus white; yellow versus green; black versus red
C) Blue versus green; red versus yellow; black versus white
D) Blue versus yellow; red versus green; black versus white
E) Blue versus yellow; red versus green; gray versus white
Question
Which color is "illegal" for our visual systems?

A) Bluish green
B) Reddish yellow
C) Yellowish green
D) Reddish blue
E) Greenish red
Question
Which of the following is not a unique hue?

A) Red
B) Blue
C) Green
D) Yellow
E) Magenta
Question
A unique blue is a blue that has no _______ or green tint.

A) yellow
B) red
C) purple
D) orange
E) cyan
Question
In the hue cancellation experiments described in the textbook, if the starting color were too reddish, you would add

A) yellow.
B) blue.
C) green.
D) purple.
E) orange.
Question
Suppose you are the lighting director for a theater production. The current spotlight on the stage is too blue and you want to make it whiter. What colored spotlight would you shine on the same area to cancel out the blue?

A) Yellow
B) Blue
C) Green
D) Purple
E) Orange
Question
_______ is the inability to perceive colors due to damage to the central nervous system.

A) Achromatopsia
B) Deuteranopia
C) Agnosia
D) Anomia
E) Akinisthesia
Question
Which of the following is not a basic color term?

A) Red
B) Green
C) Blue
D) Light blue
E) Brown
Question
Suppose a new, previously isolated culture is discovered and their language only has four color words. Which color is least likely to be one of the color terms in that language?

A) Black
B) Tan
C) Red
D) Yellow
E) White
Question
_______ is the idea that basic perceptual experiences may be determined in part by the cultural environment.

A) Cultural determination
B) Culturalism
C) Cultural perceptualism
D) Cultural relativism
E) Chromatic adaptation
Question
A(n) _______ is an individual who suffers from color blindness that is due to the absence of M-cones.

A) deuteranope
B) protanope
C) tritanope
D) isotope
E) color-anomalous individual
Question
A(n) _______ is an individual who suffers from color blindness that is due to the absence of L-cones.

A) deuteranope
B) protanope
C) tritanope
D) isotope
E) color-anomalous individual
Question
A(n) _______ is an individual who suffers from color blindness that is due to the absence of S-cones.

A) deuteranope
B) protanope
C) tritanope
D) isotope
E) color-anomalous individual
Question
Which genetic difference in color vision would cause someone to see the most color metamers when doing a color-matching experiment?

A) Deuteranopia
B) Protanopia
C) Tritanopia
D) Color-anomaly
E) Rod monochromatism
Question
If a video game labels friendly characters as green and enemy characters as red, who might have a hard time seeing the difference between friendly and enemy characters?

A) A deuteranope
B) A protonope
C) A tritanope
D) Both deuteranopes and protonopes
E) Both deuteranopes and tritanopes
Question
_______ describes an individual with no cones of any type.

A) A cone monochromat
B) Cone-anomalous
C) A protanope
D) A rod monochromat
E) A deuteranope
Question
What is the term for an inability to name objects or colors despite being able to see and recognize them?

A) Agnosia
B) Prosopagnosia
C) Achromatopsia
D) Anomia
E) Akinetopsia
Question
Which term describes the experience of seeing colors when hearing music or perceiving a letter as having a color, even if it is printed in black ink?

A) Achromatopsia
B) Synesthesia
C) Deuteranopia
D) Protanopia
E) Tritanopia
Question
_______ is a color perception effect in which the color of one region induces the opponent color in a neighboring region.

A) Afterimage
B) Achromatopsia
C) Color contrast
D) Color assimilation
E) Color constancy
Question
Suppose you have a red surface and want it to seem as red as possible. What sort of background should you put behind it, according to the color contrast effect?

A) Red
B) Green
C) Blue
D) Yellow
E) Orange
Question
_______ is a color perception effect in which two colors bleed into each other, each taking on some of the chromatic quality of the other.

A) Afterimage
B) Achromatopsia
C) Color contrast
D) Color assimilation
E) Color constancy
Question
Which of the following is a related color?

A) Orange
B) Purple
C) Blue
D) Green
E) Brown
Question
A(n) _______ is a visual image seen after the stimulus has been removed.

A) adapting stimulus
B) afterimage
C) neutral point
D) metamer
E) hallucination
Question
Suppose you are shown a red circle for a moment, and then shown two color choices and asked which of these colors you saw before. Which color pairing would present the most difficult choice?

A) Red versus yellow
B) Red versus green
C) Red versus maroon
D) Red versus blue
E) Red versus orange
Question
In the case of a negative afterimage, a yellow stimulus would produce a _______ afterimage.

A) blue
B) green
C) red
D) brown
E) black
Question
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   If you stare at the right-hand image of the figure for 20 seconds, and then look at the left-hand image, which colors do the top three circles appear to be, from left to right (i.e., 11, 12, and 1 o'clock positions)?</strong> A) Blue, green, yellow B) Red, blue, orange C) Red, green, yellow D) Yellow, green, red E) Purple, green, orange <div style=padding-top: 35px> If you stare at the right-hand image of the figure for 20 seconds, and then look at the left-hand image, which colors do the top three circles appear to be, from left to right (i.e., 11, 12, and 1 o'clock positions)?

A) Blue, green, yellow
B) Red, blue, orange
C) Red, green, yellow
D) Yellow, green, red
E) Purple, green, orange
Question
The tendency of a surface to appear the same color under a fairly wide range of illuminations is known as

A) color invariance.
B) color constancy.
C) color anomaly.
D) reflectance.
E) illuminance.
Question
What is the function relating the wavelength of light to the percentage of that wavelength that is reflected from the surface?

A) Spectral power distribution
B) Spectral illuminant
C) Spectral reflectance function
D) Color absorption function
E) Wavelength absorption function
Question
What is the term for the light that shines onto a surface?

A) Light
B) Reflectant
C) Source
D) Spectrant
E) Illuminant
Question
Which of the following is an argument from the textbook about the usefulness of color vision?

A) It helps animals during migration.
B) It helps animals identify predators and avoid them.
C) It aids in night vision.
D) It improves peripheral vision.
E) It helps animals find food and mates.
Question
Some animals achieve color vision not with different photopigments, but rather with

A) multi-colored lenses.
B) drops of colored oil over their photoreceptors.
C) specially evolved aqueous humor that filters ultraviolet light.
D) extra-sensory perception.
E) pigmented corneas that filter different wavelengths of light.
Question
When white wine is tinted to have a rosé color, what flavors do people report that are different than what they report with normal white wine?

A) More red fruit and less white fruit flavor
B) More white fruit and less red fruit flavor
C) More citrus flavor
D) More bitter green flavor
E) Less sweetness
Question
Name the three steps in color perception as discussed in the textbook, and briefly describe each one.
Question
What is the difference between additive and subtractive color mixing?
Question
What is a unique hue?
Question
What is an afterimage and what does it reveal about how color perception works?
Question
What is the principle of univariance and what are the implications of the principle for color perception?
Question
What are the similarities and differences between the trichromatic and opponent color theories of color perception?
Question
What is color constancy, and how does the visual system achieve it?
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Deck 5: The Perception of Color
1
Which of the following lists the steps in color perception in the correct order?

A) Detection, appearance, discrimination
B) Appearance, detection, discrimination
C) Detection, discrimination, appearance
D) Appearance, discrimination, detection
E) Discrimination, detection, appearance
Detection, discrimination, appearance
2
Which photoreceptors do not contribute to color vision?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) Rods
E) All of these photoreceptors contribute to color vision.
Rods
3
Which photoreceptors are most active when looking at a beautiful sunset?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) Rods
E) S-cones and rods
L-cones
4
Which photoreceptors are most active when looking at a blue sky?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) M- and L-cones
E) Rods
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5
Which photoreceptors are most active when looking at a green forest?

A) S-cones
B) M-cones
C) L-cones
D) Rods
E) All cones would be equally active.
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k this deck
6
Which color pair is farthest apart in wavelength?

A) Green and red
B) Blue and red
C) Blue and yellow
D) Green and purple
E) Blue and purple
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k this deck
7
What type of lighting conditions occurs during the daytime in full sunlight?

A) Photopic
B) Mesopic
C) Biopic
D) Monopic
E) Scotopic
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8
Refer to the image.
<strong>Refer to the image.   What kind of lighting condition is depicted in the image?</strong> A) Photopic B) Mesopic C) Biopic D) Monopic E) Scotopic What kind of lighting condition is depicted in the image?

A) Photopic
B) Mesopic
C) Biopic
D) Monopic
E) Scotopic
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9
Refer to the image.
<strong>Refer to the image.   The moonlit world depicted in the image appears to be drained of color because</strong> A) we can only use two types of rod photoreceptors under these conditions. B) in photopic conditions, only our rods are active. C) in scotopic conditions, only our rods are active. D) in photopic conditions, only our cones are active. E) in scotopic conditions, only our S-cones are active. The moonlit world depicted in the image appears to be drained of color because

A) we can only use two types of rod photoreceptors under these conditions.
B) in photopic conditions, only our rods are active.
C) in scotopic conditions, only our rods are active.
D) in photopic conditions, only our cones are active.
E) in scotopic conditions, only our S-cones are active.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The principle of univariance refers to the fact that

A) we have three types of cones in our visual system.
B) an infinite set of different wavelength-intensity combinations can elicit the same response from a single type of photoreceptor.
C) an infinite set of different wavelength-intensity combinations can elicit the same response from three different types of photoreceptors that are compared to each other.
D) many shades of colors appear the same under certain lighting conditions.
E) an infinite set of cones can record the same response from a single wavelength.
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Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
According to the principle of univariance, which genetic difference in color vision would cause someone to be truly color-blind?

A) Deuteranope
B) Protanope
C) Tritanope
D) Color-anomalous
E) Cone monochromat
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Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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12
_______ are different mixtures of wavelengths that look identical.

A) Subtractive light mixtures
B) Additive light mixtures
C) Hues
D) Metamers
E) Illuminants
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
According to the _______ theory, the color of any light is defined in our visual system by the relationships among three numbers of a set.

A) univariance
B) saturation
C) trichromacy
D) opponent color
E) subtractive color mixing
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14
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   Which scientist developed the color-matching technique depicted in the figure?</strong> A) Helmholtz B) Young C) Maxwell D) Smith E) Newton Which scientist developed the color-matching technique depicted in the figure?

A) Helmholtz
B) Young
C) Maxwell
D) Smith
E) Newton
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15
How many lights (of the correct type) are required to match any color that humans can see?

A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Four
E) Five
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
RGB televisions and computer monitors have red, green, and blue pixels. Why don't they have yellow pixels?

A) Red + blue is a metamer for yellow.
B) Green + blue is a metamer for yellow.
C) Red + green is a metamer for yellow.
D) Red + green + blue is a metamer for yellow.
E) Red + green + blue pixels stimulate the rods, which perceive yellow.
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17
Mixing paints to create new colors is an example of _______ color mixing, while shining lights to create new colors is an example of _______ color mixing.

A) additive; subtractive
B) subtractive; additive
C) additive; component
D) multiple; opponent
E) opponent; multiple
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18
When adding colors, blue and yellow create white through _______ color mixing and create green through _______ color mixing.

A) additive; subtractive
B) subtractive; additive
C) additive; component
D) multiple; opponent
E) opponent; multiple
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19
What kind of cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) compute chromatic differences, such as (L-M) and (M-L)?

A) Amacrine cells
B) Bipolar cells
C) Cone-opponent cells
D) Rod-opponent cells
E) Stereo cells
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20
How many dimensions does color space consist of?

A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Four
E) Five
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which of the following values (ranging from 0 to 255) in RGB color space would represent the color white?

A) R:255, G:0, B:0
B) R:0, G:255, B:0
C) R:0, G:0, B:000
D) R:255, G:255, B:255
E) R:0, G:0, B:0
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22
In HSB (hue, saturation, brightness) color space, how does red differ from pink?

A) Red has more hue than pink.
B) Red has more saturation than pink.
C) Red has more brightness than pink.
D) Pink has more hue than red.
E) Pink has more saturation than red.
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23
According to the opponent color theory, the perception of color is based on the output of _______ cones, each of them an opponency between _______ colors.

A) two; two
B) three; two
C) three; three
D) four; two
E) four; three
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24
Which of the following correctly lists the color-opponent pairs coded by the visual system?

A) Blue versus red; yellow versus green; black versus white
B) Blue versus white; yellow versus green; black versus red
C) Blue versus green; red versus yellow; black versus white
D) Blue versus yellow; red versus green; black versus white
E) Blue versus yellow; red versus green; gray versus white
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25
Which color is "illegal" for our visual systems?

A) Bluish green
B) Reddish yellow
C) Yellowish green
D) Reddish blue
E) Greenish red
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26
Which of the following is not a unique hue?

A) Red
B) Blue
C) Green
D) Yellow
E) Magenta
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27
A unique blue is a blue that has no _______ or green tint.

A) yellow
B) red
C) purple
D) orange
E) cyan
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28
In the hue cancellation experiments described in the textbook, if the starting color were too reddish, you would add

A) yellow.
B) blue.
C) green.
D) purple.
E) orange.
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29
Suppose you are the lighting director for a theater production. The current spotlight on the stage is too blue and you want to make it whiter. What colored spotlight would you shine on the same area to cancel out the blue?

A) Yellow
B) Blue
C) Green
D) Purple
E) Orange
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30
_______ is the inability to perceive colors due to damage to the central nervous system.

A) Achromatopsia
B) Deuteranopia
C) Agnosia
D) Anomia
E) Akinisthesia
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Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which of the following is not a basic color term?

A) Red
B) Green
C) Blue
D) Light blue
E) Brown
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32
Suppose a new, previously isolated culture is discovered and their language only has four color words. Which color is least likely to be one of the color terms in that language?

A) Black
B) Tan
C) Red
D) Yellow
E) White
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33
_______ is the idea that basic perceptual experiences may be determined in part by the cultural environment.

A) Cultural determination
B) Culturalism
C) Cultural perceptualism
D) Cultural relativism
E) Chromatic adaptation
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Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
A(n) _______ is an individual who suffers from color blindness that is due to the absence of M-cones.

A) deuteranope
B) protanope
C) tritanope
D) isotope
E) color-anomalous individual
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Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
A(n) _______ is an individual who suffers from color blindness that is due to the absence of L-cones.

A) deuteranope
B) protanope
C) tritanope
D) isotope
E) color-anomalous individual
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
A(n) _______ is an individual who suffers from color blindness that is due to the absence of S-cones.

A) deuteranope
B) protanope
C) tritanope
D) isotope
E) color-anomalous individual
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Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which genetic difference in color vision would cause someone to see the most color metamers when doing a color-matching experiment?

A) Deuteranopia
B) Protanopia
C) Tritanopia
D) Color-anomaly
E) Rod monochromatism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
If a video game labels friendly characters as green and enemy characters as red, who might have a hard time seeing the difference between friendly and enemy characters?

A) A deuteranope
B) A protonope
C) A tritanope
D) Both deuteranopes and protonopes
E) Both deuteranopes and tritanopes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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39
_______ describes an individual with no cones of any type.

A) A cone monochromat
B) Cone-anomalous
C) A protanope
D) A rod monochromat
E) A deuteranope
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40
What is the term for an inability to name objects or colors despite being able to see and recognize them?

A) Agnosia
B) Prosopagnosia
C) Achromatopsia
D) Anomia
E) Akinetopsia
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41
Which term describes the experience of seeing colors when hearing music or perceiving a letter as having a color, even if it is printed in black ink?

A) Achromatopsia
B) Synesthesia
C) Deuteranopia
D) Protanopia
E) Tritanopia
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42
_______ is a color perception effect in which the color of one region induces the opponent color in a neighboring region.

A) Afterimage
B) Achromatopsia
C) Color contrast
D) Color assimilation
E) Color constancy
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43
Suppose you have a red surface and want it to seem as red as possible. What sort of background should you put behind it, according to the color contrast effect?

A) Red
B) Green
C) Blue
D) Yellow
E) Orange
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44
_______ is a color perception effect in which two colors bleed into each other, each taking on some of the chromatic quality of the other.

A) Afterimage
B) Achromatopsia
C) Color contrast
D) Color assimilation
E) Color constancy
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45
Which of the following is a related color?

A) Orange
B) Purple
C) Blue
D) Green
E) Brown
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46
A(n) _______ is a visual image seen after the stimulus has been removed.

A) adapting stimulus
B) afterimage
C) neutral point
D) metamer
E) hallucination
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47
Suppose you are shown a red circle for a moment, and then shown two color choices and asked which of these colors you saw before. Which color pairing would present the most difficult choice?

A) Red versus yellow
B) Red versus green
C) Red versus maroon
D) Red versus blue
E) Red versus orange
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48
In the case of a negative afterimage, a yellow stimulus would produce a _______ afterimage.

A) blue
B) green
C) red
D) brown
E) black
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49
Refer to the figure.
<strong>Refer to the figure.   If you stare at the right-hand image of the figure for 20 seconds, and then look at the left-hand image, which colors do the top three circles appear to be, from left to right (i.e., 11, 12, and 1 o'clock positions)?</strong> A) Blue, green, yellow B) Red, blue, orange C) Red, green, yellow D) Yellow, green, red E) Purple, green, orange If you stare at the right-hand image of the figure for 20 seconds, and then look at the left-hand image, which colors do the top three circles appear to be, from left to right (i.e., 11, 12, and 1 o'clock positions)?

A) Blue, green, yellow
B) Red, blue, orange
C) Red, green, yellow
D) Yellow, green, red
E) Purple, green, orange
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50
The tendency of a surface to appear the same color under a fairly wide range of illuminations is known as

A) color invariance.
B) color constancy.
C) color anomaly.
D) reflectance.
E) illuminance.
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51
What is the function relating the wavelength of light to the percentage of that wavelength that is reflected from the surface?

A) Spectral power distribution
B) Spectral illuminant
C) Spectral reflectance function
D) Color absorption function
E) Wavelength absorption function
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52
What is the term for the light that shines onto a surface?

A) Light
B) Reflectant
C) Source
D) Spectrant
E) Illuminant
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53
Which of the following is an argument from the textbook about the usefulness of color vision?

A) It helps animals during migration.
B) It helps animals identify predators and avoid them.
C) It aids in night vision.
D) It improves peripheral vision.
E) It helps animals find food and mates.
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54
Some animals achieve color vision not with different photopigments, but rather with

A) multi-colored lenses.
B) drops of colored oil over their photoreceptors.
C) specially evolved aqueous humor that filters ultraviolet light.
D) extra-sensory perception.
E) pigmented corneas that filter different wavelengths of light.
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55
When white wine is tinted to have a rosé color, what flavors do people report that are different than what they report with normal white wine?

A) More red fruit and less white fruit flavor
B) More white fruit and less red fruit flavor
C) More citrus flavor
D) More bitter green flavor
E) Less sweetness
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56
Name the three steps in color perception as discussed in the textbook, and briefly describe each one.
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57
What is the difference between additive and subtractive color mixing?
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58
What is a unique hue?
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59
What is an afterimage and what does it reveal about how color perception works?
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60
What is the principle of univariance and what are the implications of the principle for color perception?
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61
What are the similarities and differences between the trichromatic and opponent color theories of color perception?
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62
What is color constancy, and how does the visual system achieve it?
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