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kleurappearance

Kleurappearance is a term used in color science and perceptual psychology to denote the perceived color of a surface or light source under a specific set of viewing conditions, including illumination, viewing geometry, and observer state. It combines the physical properties of the scene, such as the spectral reflectance of surfaces and the spectral power distribution of the light, with perceptual processes like chromatic adaptation and color constancy. Because appearance depends on context, two physically different stimuli can appear the same under one lighting condition and different under another—a phenomenon known as metamerism.

In practice, color appearance is described with models that translate physical measurements into perceptual attributes such

Measurement and application of kleurappearance occur across several fields. In imaging and display technology, color appearance

Linguistically, kleurappearance is often used in Dutch-language literature as a direct translation of “color appearance.” The

as
hue,
lightness,
and
chroma.
These
models
aim
to
predict
how
a
stimulus
will
be
perceived
when
illumination
changes,
or
when
the
surround,
observer
adaptation,
or
other
conditions
vary.
Prominent
examples
include
the
CIECAM02
and
CAM16
families
of
color
appearance
models,
which
attempt
to
account
for
adaptation
and
contextual
effects
in
a
systematic
way.
models
guide
color
management
and
calibration.
In
photography,
printing,
and
product
design,
they
support
faithful
reproduction
of
appearance
under
target
lighting.
In
architectural
lighting
and
visual
merchandising,
they
help
optimize
perceived
color
quality
and
consistency
in
real-world
environments.
concept
spans
interdisciplinary
work,
linking
physical
optics
with
perceptual
psychology
to
explain
how
humans
experience
color
under
varying
conditions.