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by mwambua
165 days ago
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> The human eye is most sensitive to green light, so that channel effectively carries the majority of the luminance (brightness/detail) data How does this affect luminance perception for deuteranopes? (Since their color blindness is caused by a deficiency of the cones that detect green wavelengths) |
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Blue cones make little or no contribution to luminance. Red cones are sensitive across the full spectrum of visual light, but green cones have no sensitivity to the longest wavelengths [2]. Since protans don't have the "hardware" to sense long wavelengths, it's inevitable that they'd have unusual luminance perception.
I'm not sure why deutans have such a normal luminous efficiency curve (and I can't find anything in a quick literature search), but it must involve the blue cones, because there's no way to produce that curve from the red-cone response alone.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_efficiency_function#C...
[2]: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cone-fundamentals-wi...