Color or colour is
the visual perceptual property corresponding in humans to the categories called
red, green, blue, and others. Color derives from the spectrum of light (distribution
of light power versus wavelength) interacting in the eye with the spectral
sensitivities of the light receptors. Color categories and physical
specifications of color are also associated with objects, materials, light
sources, etc., based on their physical properties such as light absorption,
reflection, or emission spectra. By defining a color space, colors can be
identified numerically by their coordinates.
Because perception
of color stems from the varying spectral sensitivity of different types of cone
cells in the retina to different parts of the spectrum, colors may be defined
and quantified by the degree to which they stimulate these cells. These
physical or physiological quantifications of color, however, do not fully
explain the psychophysical perception of color appearance.
The science of color
is sometimes called chromatics, chromatography, colorimetry, or simply color
science. It includes the perception of color by the human eye and brain, the
origin of color in materials, color theory in art, and the physics of
electromagnetic radiation in the visible range (that is, what we commonly refer
to simply as light).
COLOUR NAMING
Colors vary in
several different ways, including hue (shades of red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, and violet), saturation, brightness, and gloss. Some color words are
derived from the name of an object of that color, such as "orange" or
"salmon", while others are abstract, like "red".
In the 1969 study
Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution, Brent Berlin and Paul Kay
describe a pattern in naming "basic" colors (like "red" but
not "red-orange" or "dark red" or "blood red",
which are "shades" of red). All languages that have two
"basic" color names distinguish dark/cool colors from bright/warm
colors. The next colors to be distinguished are usually red and then yellow or
green. All languages with six "basic" colors include black, white,
red, green, blue, and yellow. The pattern holds up to a set of twelve: black,
gray, white, pink, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, brown, and azure
(distinct from blue in Russian and Italian, but not English).
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