A Photo of Dog Vision
I was thinking that this might be a fun project, and maybe especially for those video editors who have kids.
Man's Best Friend has dichromatic vision -- meaning that Dogs can see only part of the range of colors in the visual spectrum of light wavelengths. Simply put, dogs are red-green color blind. This means that they see in shades of yellow and blue primarily. They see a brighter and less detailed world when compared to humans.
Humans, on the other hand, have trichomatic vision, meaning that they can see the whole spectrum.
More specifically for today's challenge, most humans see the rainbow of colors described by "VIBGYOR": Violet, Indigo, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, and Red (plus hundreds of variations on these shades) while dogs see "VIBYYYR" (Violet, Indigo, Blue, Yellow, Yellow, Yellow, and Red). The colors Green, Yellow, and Orange all look alike to dogs; but look different from Red and different from the various Blues and Purples. Dogs are very good at telling different shades of VIB apart. Finally, Blue-Green looks White to dogs.
I was wondering if some Channel Blend or Color Correcting experts out there wanted to share the calculations that might be required to convert 'human-see' footage to something roughly like what our canine friends observe.
The photo I placed at the top was a rough guesstimate by Mark Plonsky, Ph.D. of what a dog and human might see when viewing a color band.
I was thinking that this might be a fun project, and maybe especially for those video editors who have kids.
Man's Best Friend has dichromatic vision -- meaning that Dogs can see only part of the range of colors in the visual spectrum of light wavelengths. Simply put, dogs are red-green color blind. This means that they see in shades of yellow and blue primarily. They see a brighter and less detailed world when compared to humans.
Humans, on the other hand, have trichomatic vision, meaning that they can see the whole spectrum.
More specifically for today's challenge, most humans see the rainbow of colors described by "VIBGYOR": Violet, Indigo, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, and Red (plus hundreds of variations on these shades) while dogs see "VIBYYYR" (Violet, Indigo, Blue, Yellow, Yellow, Yellow, and Red). The colors Green, Yellow, and Orange all look alike to dogs; but look different from Red and different from the various Blues and Purples. Dogs are very good at telling different shades of VIB apart. Finally, Blue-Green looks White to dogs.
I was wondering if some Channel Blend or Color Correcting experts out there wanted to share the calculations that might be required to convert 'human-see' footage to something roughly like what our canine friends observe.
The photo I placed at the top was a rough guesstimate by Mark Plonsky, Ph.D. of what a dog and human might see when viewing a color band.