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by brudgers
1439 days ago
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Picking a color from a pallet of similar colors is explicitly rejecting the nearby colors on the swatch. It is exactly the opposite of a weak vote for nearby colors. Of course, "nearby colors" depends on which axis (or axes) of the color space is/are changing, the rates of change, and what is the criterion for ordering the aspects of color. Historically, voting on colors is a strong tradition in color science. Because color is a property of human perception not a property of the external world...turn out the lights and the apple isn't red any more. |
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> It is exactly the opposite of a weak vote for nearby colors.
Surely that is demonstrably false in cases where you could experimentally prove that two adjacent colors are below the voter's threshold of color discrimination.