The electromagnetic spectrum visible to the human eye occupies approximately one octave, from 380nm to 760nm (1nm = 107nm). (See Figure 1.) The way the human visual system perceives light is by ...
Colorimetry is, as the name suggests, the study of color. The technique differs from spectroscopy, which measures spectral output across a range of wavelengths, as it is concerned with how color is ...
The first rapid detection method, point of care (POC), was based on lateral flow assays (LFA) for pregnancy tests back in the 1970s 1,2. LFAs rely on the color change caused by the reaction between ...
The science of measuring color and color appearance is vital: The perception of color is a subjective process where the brain responds to stimuli produced when incoming light reacts with the several ...
We introduce QolorPhAST, a point-of-care modular system amenable to decentralized testing that combines an ultra-rapid nanoplasmonic structural colorimetric assay, leveraging ...
Industrial courses for the color imaging community will be offered June 4–7 by Rochester Institute of Technology’s Munsell Color Science Laboratory, part of the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging ...