153 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
153 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
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GUIDE LINES FOR EFFECTIVE COLOR TERMINAL USAGE
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Based on research done at Tektronix
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and reported in Handshake, 1985.
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PHYSIOLOGICAL GUIDELINES:
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Avoid simultaneous display of highly saturated, spectrally extreme
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colors. Reds, oranges, yellows, and greens can be viewed without refocusing,
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but cyan and blues cannot be easily viewed at the same time at as red. To
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avoid frequent refocusing and visual fatigue, extreme color pairs such as red
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and blue or yellow and purple should avoided. However, desaturating
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spectrally extreme colors will reduce the need for refocusing.
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Pure blue should be avoided for text, thin lines, and small shapes.
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Our visual system is just not set up for detailed, sharp short-wavelength
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stimuli. However, blue does make a good background color and is perceived
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clearly out into the periphery of the visual field. In fact, due to the eye's
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reduced sensitivity to blue, the raster scan pattern in a blue background
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display is less visible then when other background colors are used.
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Avoid adjacent colors differing only in the amount of blue. Edges
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differing only in the amount of blue appear indistinct.
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Older viewers need higher brightness levels to distinguish colors.
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Colors change appearance as ambient light level changes. Displays
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change color under different kinds of light - fluorescent, incandescent, or
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daylight. Appearance also changes as the light level is increased or
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decreased. On the one hand, a change due to an increase or decrease in
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contrast occurs, and on the other, due to the shift in the sensitivity of the
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eye.
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The magnitude of a detectable change in color varies across the
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spectrum. Small changes in extreme reds and purples are more difficult to
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detect than changes in other colors such as yellow and blue-green. Also, our
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visual system does not readily perceive changes in green.
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Difficulty in focusing results from edges created by color alone. Our
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visual system depends on a brightness difference at an edge to effect clear
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focusing. Multi-colored images then, should be differentiated on the basis of
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brightness as well as color.
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Avoid red and green in the periphery of large scale displays. Due to
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the insensitivity of the retinal periphery to red and green, these colors in
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saturated form should be avoided, especially for small symbols and shapes.
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Yellow and blue make good peripheral colors.
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Opponent colors go well together. Red and green or yellow and blue are
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good combinations for simple displays. The opposite combinations - red with
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yellow or green with blue - produce poorer images.
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For color deficient observers, avoid single-color distinctions.
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PERCEPTUAL GUIDELINES:
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Not all colors are equally discernible. Perceptually, we need a large
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change in wavelength to perceive and identify a color difference in some
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portions of the spectrum and a small one in other portions.
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Luminance does not equal brightness. Two equal luminance colors will
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probably appear to have different brightnesses. The deviations are most
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extreme for colors towards the ends of the spectrum (red, magenta, blue).
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Different hues have inherently different saturation levels. Yellow in
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particular always appears less saturated than other hues.
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Lightness and brightness are confounded on a color display, but not on
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a printed hard copy. The nature of a display does not allow lightness and
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brightness to be varied independently.
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Not all colors are equally readable or legible. Extreme care should
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be exercised with text color relative to background colors. Besides a loss in
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hue with reduced size, inadequate contrast frequently results when the
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background and test color are similar. As a general rule, the darker,
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spectrally extreme colors such as red, blue, magenta, brown, etc., make good
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backgrounds while the brighter, spectrum center and desaturated hues produce
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more legible test.
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Hues change with intensity and background color. In grouping elements
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on the basis of color, be sure that backgrounds or nearby colors do not change
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the hue of an element in the group. Limiting the number of colors and making
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sure they are widely separated in the spectrum will reduce confusion.
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Avoid the need for color discrimination in small areas. Hue
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information is lost for small areas. Hue information is lost for small
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areas. In general, two adjacent lines of a single pixel width will merge to
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produce a mixture of the two. Also, the human visual system produces sharper
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images with achromatic colors. Thus, for fine detail it's best to use black,
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white, and gray while reserving chromatic color for larger panels or
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attracting attention.
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COGNITIVE GUIDELINES:
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Don't overuse color. Perhaps the best rule is to use color sparingly.
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The benefits of color as an attention getter, information grouper, and value
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assigner are lost if too many colors are used. Cognitive scientists have
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shown that the human mind experiences great difficulty in maintaining more
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than 5 to 7 elements simultaneously. So it's best to limit displays to about 6
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clearly discriminable colors.
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Be aware of the nonlimear color manipulation in video and hard copy.
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At this time algorithms do not exist for translating the physical colors of an
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imaging device into a perceptually structured color set. Video or hard copy
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systems cannot match the human perception and expectations on all fronts.
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Group related elements by common background color. Cognitive science
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has advanced the notion of set and preattentive processing. In this context,
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you can prepare or set the user for related events by using a common color
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code. A successive set of images can be shown to be related by using the same
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background color.
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Similar colors connote similar meaning. Elements related in some way
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can convey that message through the degree in similarity of hue. The color
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range from blue to green is experienced as more similar that the gamut from
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red to green. Along the same lines, saturation level can also be used to
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connote strength of the relationship.
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Brightness and saturation draw attention. The brightest and most
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highly saturated area of a color display immediately draws the viewer's
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attention.
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Link the degree of color change to event magnitude. As an alternative
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to bar charts or tic marks on amplitude scales, displays can portray magnitude
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changes with the progressive steps of changing color. A desaturated cyan can
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be increased in saturation as the graphed elements increase in value.
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Progressively switching from one hue to another can be used to indicate
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passing critical levels.
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Order colors by their spectral position. To increase the number of
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colors on a a display requires imposing a meaningful order on the colors. The
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most obvious order is that provided by the spectrum with the mnemonic ROY G
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BIV (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet).
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Warm and cold colors should indicate action levels. Traditionally,
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the warm (long wavelength) colors are used to signify action or the
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requirement of response. Cool colors, on the other hand, indicate status or
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background information. Most people also experience warm colors advancing
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towards them - hence forcing attention - and cool colors receding or drawing
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away.
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While these guidelines offer some suggestions, they certainly
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shouldn't be taken as binding under all circumstances. There are too many
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variables in color display, color copying, human perception, and human
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interpretation to make any hard and fast roules. So, by all means, experiment.
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