Colour Order

Publication date

2019-01-01

Authors

Koenderink, JanISNI 0000000365833575
van Doorn, AndreaISNI 000000038704944X
Gegenfurtner, Karl

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Scrambled hue circles with a resolution ranging from 6 steps to 60 steps were presented on a varicoloured background. The hue steps were presented as mutually non-contiguous “chips,” small circular disks, placed uniformly on a large circle. The task was to sort the chips with respect to their hue. Participants generally manage to sort a 24-step hue circle faultlessly but commit many ordering reversals (also of several steps, up to five) on sorting a 60-step hue circle. The pattern of local reversals of chips depends on the hue region. The findings are relevant for the design of user interfaces for various types of applications, such as colour pickers or graphical design, that rely on rgb screen colours as the available palette.

Keywords

colour sorting, hue circle, hue resolution, hundred hue test, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Ophthalmology, Sensory Systems, Artificial Intelligence

Citation

Koenderink, J, van Doorn, A & Gegenfurtner, K 2019, 'Colour Order', i-Perception, vol. 10, no. 5. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669519872516