Abstract
AbstractHumans exhibit colour vision variations due to genetic polymorphisms, with trichromacy being the most common, while some people are classified as dichromats. Whether genetic differences in colour vision affect the way of viewing complex images remains unknown. Here, we investigated how people with different colour vision focused their gaze on aesthetic paintings by eye-tracking while freely viewing digital rendering of paintings and assessed individual impressions through a decomposition analysis of adjective ratings for the images. Gaze concentrated areas among trichromats were more highly correlated than those among dichromats. However, compared to the brief dichromatic experience with the simulated images, there was little effect of innate colour vision differences. These results indicate that chromatic information is instructive as a cue for guiding attention, whereas the impression of each person is unaffected by colour-vision genetics and would be normalised to their own sensory experience through one’s own colour space.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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