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Hunter Lab (also known as Hunter L,a,b) is a color space defined in 1948Hunter, Richard Sewall. "Photoelectric Color-Difference Meter". p. 661. In: Hunter, Richard Sewall. "Accuracy, Precision, and Stability of New Photo-electric Color-Difference Meter". p. 1094. In: by Richard S. Hunter. It was designed to be computed via simple formulas from the CIEXYZ space, but to be more perceptually uniform. Hunter named his coordinates ''L'', ''a'' and ''b''. Hunter Lab was a precursor to
CIELAB The CIELAB color space, also referred to as ''L*a*b*'', is a color space defined by the International Commission on Illumination (abbreviated CIE) in 1976. It expresses color as three values: ''L*'' for perceptual lightness and ''a*'' and ''b* ...
, created in 1976 by the
International Commission on Illumination The International Commission on Illumination (usually abbreviated CIE for its French name Commission internationale de l'éclairage) is the international authority on light, illumination, colour, and colour spaces. It was established in 1913 a ...
(CIE), which named the coordinates for CIELAB as ''L*'', ''a*'', ''b*'' to distinguish them from Hunter's coordinates.


Formulation

''L'' is a correlate of lightness and is computed from the ''Y'' tristimulus value using Priest's approximation to Munsell value: : L = 100\sqrt\frac where ''Y''n is the ''Y'' tristimulus value of a specified white object. For surface-color applications, the specified white object is usually (though not always) a hypothetical material with unit reflectance that follows Lambert's law. The resulting ''L'' will be scaled between 0 (black) and 100 (white); roughly ten times the Munsell value. Note that a medium lightness of 50 is produced by a luminance of 25, due to the square root proportionality. ''a'' and ''b'' are termed opponent color axes. ''a'' represents, roughly, Redness (positive) versus Greenness (negative). It is computed as: : a = K_\left(\frac\right) where ''K''a is a coefficient that depends upon the illuminant (for D65, ''K''a is 172.30; see approximate formula below) and ''X''n is the ''X'' tristimulus value of the specified white object. The other opponent color axis, ''b'', is positive for yellow colors and negative for blue colors. It is computed as: : b = K_\left(\frac\right) where ''K''b is a coefficient that depends upon the illuminant (for D65, ''K''b is 67.20; see approximate formula below) and ''Z''n is the ''Z'' tristimulus value of the specified white object.Hunter Labs (1996). "Hunter Lab Color Scale". ''Insight on Color'' 8 9 (August 1–15, 1996). Reston, VA, USA: Hunter Associates Laboratories. Both ''a'' and ''b'' will be zero for objects that have the same chromaticity coordinates as the specified white objects (i.e., achromatic, grey, objects).


Approximate formulas for ''K''a and ''K''b

In the previous version of the Hunter ''Lab'' color space, ''K''a was 175 and ''K''b was 70. Hunter Associates Lab discovered that better agreement could be obtained with other color difference metrics, such as CIELAB (see above) by allowing these coefficients to depend upon the illuminants. Approximate formulae are: : K_ \approx \frac(X_ + Y_) : K_ \approx \frac(Y_ + Z_) which result in the original values for Illuminant ''C'', the original illuminant with which the ''Lab'' color space was used.


As an Adams chromatic valence space

Adams chromatic valence color spaces are based on two elements: a (relatively) uniform lightness scale and a (relatively) uniform chromaticity scale. If we take as the uniform lightness scale Priest's approximation to the Munsell Value scale, which would be written in modern notation as: : L = 100\sqrt and, as the uniform chromaticity coordinates: : c_\mathrm = \frac - 1 = \frac : c_\mathrm = k_ \left(1 - \frac\right) = k_\mathrm\frac where ''k''e is a tuning coefficient, we obtain the two chromatic axes: : a = K\cdot L\cdot c_\mathrm = K\cdot 100\frac and : b = K\cdot L\cdot c_\mathrm = K\cdot 100 k_\mathrm \frac which is identical to the Hunter ''Lab'' formulas given above if we select and . Therefore, the Hunter Lab color space is an Adams chromatic valence color space.


References

{{reflist Color space 1948 introductions