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  2. Chromaticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromaticity

    Chromaticity consists of two independent parameters, often specified as hue (h) and colorfulness (s), where the latter is alternatively called saturation, chroma, intensity, [1] or excitation purity. [2] [3] This number of parameters follows from trichromacy of vision of most humans, which is assumed by most models in color science.

  3. Colorfulness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorfulness

    Saturation is the "colorfulness of an area judged in proportion to its brightness", [6] [2] which in effect is the perceived freedom from whitishness of the light coming from the area. An object with a given spectral reflectance exhibits approximately constant saturation for all levels of illumination, unless the brightness is very high.

  4. TSL color space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TSL_color_space

    TSL color space (Tint, Saturation and Lightness) is a perceptual color space which defines color as tint (the degree to which a stimulus can be described as similar to or different from another stimuli that are described as red, green, blue, yellow, and white, can be thought of as hue with white added), saturation (the colorfulness of a stimulus relative to its own brightness), and lightness ...

  5. CIECAM02 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIECAM02

    Chroma is the colorfulness relative to the brightness of another color that appears white under similar viewing conditions. This allows for the fact that a surface of a given chroma displays increasing colorfulness as the level of illumination increases. Saturation is the colorfulness of a color relative to its own brightness.

  6. Color appearance model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_appearance_model

    Chromatic adaptation is a prime example for the case that two different stimuli with thereby different XYZ tristimulus values create an identical color appearance. If the color temperature of the illuminating light source changes, so do the spectral power distribution and thereby the XYZ tristimulus values of the light reflected from the white ...

  7. List of color spaces and their uses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_color_spaces_and...

    HSL (hue, saturation, lightness or luminance), also known as HSI (hue, saturation, intensity) or HSD (hue, saturation, darkness), is quite similar to HSV, with "lightness" replacing "brightness". The difference is that a perfectly light color in HSL is pure white; but a perfectly bright color in HSV is analogous to shining a white light on a ...

  8. Hue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hue

    In color theory, hue is one of the main properties (called color appearance parameters) of a color, defined technically in the CIECAM02 model as "the degree to which a stimulus can be described as similar to or different from stimuli that are described as red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet," [1] within certain theories of color vision.

  9. Saturation (color theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Saturation_(color_theory...

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Saturation_(color_theory)&oldid=233473920"