The aim of the study is to determine best printing technology for creation of colour vision deficiency tests. Valid tests for protanopia and deuteranopia were created from perceived colour matching experiments from printed colour samples by colour deficient individuals. Calibrated EpsonStylus Pro 7800 printer for ink prints and Noritsu HD 3701 digital printer for photographic prints were used. Multispectral imagery (by tunable liquid crystal filters system CRI Nuance Vis 07) data analysis show that in case of ink prints, the measured pixel colour coordinate dispersion (in the CIExy colour diagram) of similar colour arrays is smaller than in case of photographic printing. The print quality in terms of colour coordinate dispersion for printing methods used is much higher than in case of commercially available colour vision deficiency tests. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Luse, K., Fomins, S., & Ozolinsh, M. (2012). Pseudoisochromatic test plate colour representation dependence on printing technology. In IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering (Vol. 38). https://doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/38/1/012024
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